38 research outputs found
Ultra-high speed electro-optical systems employing fiber optics final report
Ultrahigh speed electro-optical systems employing fiber optic
Computational studies of light acceptance and propagation in straight and curved multimodal active fibres
A Monte Carlo simulation has been performed to track light rays in
cylindrical multimode fibres by ray optics. The trapping efficiencies for skew
and meridional rays in active fibres and distributions of characteristic
quantities for all trapped light rays have been calculated. The simulation
provides new results for curved fibres, where the analytical expressions are
too complex to be solved. The light losses due to sharp bending of fibres are
presented as a function of the ratio of curvature to fibre radius and bending
angle. It is shown that a radius of curvature to fibre radius ratio of greater
than 65 results in a light loss of less than 10% with the loss occurring in a
transition region at bending angles of pi/8 rad.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figure
Grating-coupled excitation of multiple surface plasmon-polariton waves
The excitation of multiple surface-plasmon-polariton (SPP) waves of different
linear polarization states and phase speeds by a surface-relief grating formed
by a metal and a rugate filter, both of finite thickness, was studied
theoretically, using rigorous coupled-wave-analysis. The incident plane wave
can be either p or s polarized. The excitation of SPP waves is indicated by the
presence of those peaks in the plots of absorbance vs. the incidence angle that
are independent of the thickness of the rugate filter. The absorbance peaks
representing the excitation of s-polarized SPP waves are narrower than those
representing p-polarized SPP waves. Two incident plane waves propagating in
different directions may excite the same SPP wave. A line source could excite
several SPP waves simultaneously
Guided Modes of Elliptical Metamaterial Waveguides
The propagation of guided electromagnetic waves in open elliptical
metamaterial waveguide structures is investigated. The waveguide contains a
negative-index media core, where the permittivity, and permeability
are negative over a given bandwidth. The allowed mode spectrum for these
structures is numerically calculated by solving a dispersion relation that is
expressed in terms of Mathieu functions. By probing certain regions of
parameter space, we find the possibility exists to have extremely localized
waves that transmit along the surface of the waveguide
Self-Spin-Controlled Rotation of Spatial States of a Dirac Electron in a Cylindrical Potential via Spin-Orbit Interaction
Solution of the Dirac equation predicts that when an electron with non-zero
orbital angular momentum propagates in a cylindrically symmetric potential, its
spin and orbital degrees of freedom interact, causing the electron's phase
velocity to depend on whether its spin and orbital angular momenta vectors are
oriented parallel or anti-parallel with respect to each other. This spin-orbit
splitting of the electronic dispersion curves can result in a rotation of the
electron's spatial state in a manner controlled by the electron's own spin
z-component value. These effects persist at non-relativistic velocities. To
clarify the physical origin of this effect, we compare solutions of the Dirac
equation to perturbative predictions of the Schrodinger-Pauli equation with a
spin-orbit term, using the standard Foldy-Wouthuysen Hamiltonian. This clearly
shows that the origin of the effect is the familiar relativistic spin-orbit
interaction.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, 2 appendices, final versio
Glass fiber condensing systems
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Rochester. College of Engineering and Applied Science. Institute of Optics, 1957