132 research outputs found
Incoherent white light solitons in logarithmically saturable noninstantaneous nonlinear media
We analytically demonstrate the existence of white light solitons in logarithmically saturable noninstantaneous nonlinear media. This incoherent soliton has elliptic Gaussian intensity profile, and elliptic Gaussian spatial correlation statistics. The existence curve of the soliton connects the strength of the nonlinearity, the spatial correlation distance as a function of frequency, and the characteristic width of the soliton. For this soliton to exist, the spatial correlation distance must be smaller for larger temporal frequency constituents of the beam
Slow wave resonance in periodic stacks of anisotropic layers
We consider transmission band edge resonance in periodic layered structures
involving birefringent layers. Previously we have shown that the presence of
birefringent layers with misaligned in-plane anisotropy can dramatically
enhance the performance of the photonic-crystal Fabry-Perot resonator. It
allows to reduce its size by an order of magnitude without compromising on its
performance. The key characteristic of the enhanced photonic-crystal cavity is
that its Bloch dispersion relation displays a degenerate photonic band edge,
rather than only regular ones. This can be realized in specially arranged
stacks of misaligned anisotropic layers. On the down side, the presence of
birefringent layers results in the Fabry-Perot resonance being coupled only
with one (elliptic) polarization component of the incident wave, while the
other polarization component is reflected back to space. In this paper we show
how a small modification of the periodic layered array can solve the above
fundamental problem and provide a perfect impedance match regardless of the
incident wave polarization, while preserving the giant transmission resonance,
characteristic of a degenerate photonic band edge. Both features are of
critical importance for a variety of practical applications, including
antennas, light amplification, optical and microwave filters, etc.Comment: To be submitted to Phys. Rev.
Enabling single-mode behavior over large areas with photonic Dirac cones
Many of graphene's unique electronic properties emerge from its Dirac-like
electronic energy spectrum. Similarly, it is expected that a nanophotonic
system featuring Dirac dispersion will open a path to a number of important
research avenues. To date, however, all proposed realizations of a photonic
analog of graphene lack fully omnidirectional out-of-plane light confinement,
which has prevented creating truly realistic implementations of this class of
systems. Here we report on a novel route to achieve all-dielectric
three-dimensional photonic materials featuring Dirac-like dispersion in a
quasi-two-dimensional system. We further discuss how this finding could enable
a dramatic enhancement of the spontaneous emission coupling efficiency (the
\beta-factor) over large areas, defying the common wisdom that the \beta-factor
degrades rapidly as the size of the system increases. These results might
enable general new classes of large-area ultralow-threshold lasers,
single-photon sources, quantum information processing devices and energy
harvesting systems
Slow-light optical bullets in arrays of nonlinear Bragg-grating waveguides
We demonstrate how to control independently both spatial and temporal
dynamics of slow light. We reveal that specially designed nonlinear waveguide
arrays with phase-shifted Bragg gratings demonstrate the frequency-independent
spatial diffraction near the edge of the photonic bandgap, where the group
velocity of light can be strongly reduced. We show in numerical simulations
that such structures allow a great flexibility in designing and controlling
dispersion characteristics, and open a way for efficient spatiotemporal
self-trapping and the formation of slow-light optical bullets.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; available from
http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v97/e23390
Oblique frozen modes in periodic layered media
We study the classical scattering problem of a plane electromagnetic wave
incident on the surface of semi-infinite periodic stratified media
incorporating anisotropic dielectric layers with special oblique orientation of
the anisotropy axes. We demonstrate that an obliquely incident light, upon
entering the periodic slab, gets converted into an abnormal grazing mode with
huge amplitude and zero normal component of the group velocity. This mode
cannot be represented as a superposition of extended and evanescent
contributions. Instead, it is related to a general (non-Bloch) Floquet
eigenmode with the amplitude diverging linearly with the distance from the slab
boundary. Remarkably, the slab reflectivity in such a situation can be very
low, which means an almost 100% conversion of the incident light into the
axially frozen mode with the electromagnetic energy density exceeding that of
the incident wave by several orders of magnitude. The effect can be realized at
any desirable frequency, including optical and UV frequency range. The only
essential physical requirement is the presence of dielectric layers with proper
oblique orientation of the anisotropy axes. Some practical aspects of this
phenomenon are considered.Comment: text and 9 figure
A Thermophotovoltaic System Using a Photonic Crystal Emitter
The increasing power demands of portable electronics and micro robotics has driven recent interest in millimeter-scale microgenerators. Many technologies (fuel cells, Stirling, thermoelectric, etc.) that potentially enable a portable hydrocarbon microgenerator are under active investigation. Hydrocarbon fuels have specific energies fifty times those of batteries, thus even a relatively inefficient generator can exceed the specific energy of batteries. We proposed, designed, and demonstrated a first-of-a-kind millimeter-scale thermophotovoltaic (TPV) system with a photonic crystal emitter. In a TPV system, combustion heats an emitter to incandescence and the resulting thermal radiation is converted to electricity by photovoltaic cells. Our approach uses a moderate temperature (1000–1200°C) metallic microburner coupled to a high emissivity, high selectivity photonic crystal selective emitter and low bandgap PV cells. This approach is predicted to be capable of up to 30% efficient fuel-to-electricity conversion within a millimeter-scale form factor. We have performed a robust experimental demonstration that validates the theoretical framework and the key system components, and present our results in the context of a TPV microgenerator. Although considerable technological barriers need to be overcome to realize a TPV microgenerator, we predict that 700–900 Wh/kg is possible with the current technology.Micro Autonomous Consortium Systems and Technology (Contract 892730)Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies (W911NF-13-D- 0001
Photonic Crystal Enabled Thermophotovoltaics for a Portable Microgenerator
This work presents the design and characterization of a first-of-a-kind millimeter- scale thermophotovoltaic (TPV) system using a metallic microburner, photonic crystal emitter, and low-bandgap photovoltaic (PV) cells. In our TPV system, combustion heats the emitter to incandescence and the resulting thermal radiation is converted to electricity by the low bandgap PV cells. Our motivation is to harness the high specific energy of hydrocarbon fuels at the micro- and millimeter-scale in order to meet the increasing power demands of micro robotics and portable electronics. Our experimental demonstration lays the groundwork for developing a TPV microgenerator as a viable battery replacement.United States. Dept. of Energy. Office of Basic Energy Sciences (DE-SC0001299)United States. Dept. of Energy. Office of Basic Energy Sciences (DE-FG02-09ER4657)Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies (contract W911NF-13-D-0001
Photon acceleration in vacuum
A new process associated with the nonlinear optical properties of the
electromagnetic vacuum, as predicted by quantum electrodynamics, is described.
This can be called photon acceleration in vacuum, and corresponds to the
frequency shift that takes place when a given test photon interacts with an
intense beam of background radiation.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, version to appear in Phys. Lett.
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