316 research outputs found
Doctor Who and the Creation of a Non-Gendered Hero Archetype
This project investigates the ways in which the television program Doctor Who creates a new, non-gendered hero archetype
Time domain add-drop multiplexing scheme enhanced using a saw-tooth pulse shaper
We experimentally demonstrate the use of saw-tooth optical pulses, which are shaped using a fiber Bragg grating, to achieve robust and high performance time-domain add-drop multiplexing in a scheme based on cross-phase (XPM) modulation in an optical fiber, with subsequent offset filtering. As compared to the use of more conventional pulse shapes, such as Gaussian pulses of a similar pulse width, the purpose-shaped saw-tooth pulses allow higher extinction ratios for the add and drop windows and significant improvements in the receiver sensitivity for the dropped and added channels
Photonic chip based transmitter optimization and receiver demultiplexing of a 1.28 Tbit/s OTDM signal
We demonstrate chip-based Tbaud optical signal processing for all-optical performance monitoring, switching and demultiplexing based on the instantaneous Kerr nonlinearity in a dispersion-engineered As 2S 3 planar waveguide. At the Tbaud transmitter, we use a THz bandwidth radiofrequency spectrum analyzer to perform all-optical performance monitoring and to optimize the optical time division multiplexing stages as well as mitigate impairments, for example, dispersion. At the Tbaud receiver, we demonstrate error-free demultiplexing of a 1.28 Tbit/s single wavelength, return-to-zero signal to 10 Gbit/s via four-wave mixing with negligible system penalty (< 0.5 dB). Excellent performance, including high fourwave mixing conversion efficiency and no indication of an error-floor, was achieved. Our results establish the feasibility of Tbaud signal processing using compact nonlinear planar waveguides for Tbit/s Ethernet applications
A sharp interface approach for wetting dynamics of coated droplets and soft particles
The wetting dynamics of liquid particles, from coated droplets to soft capsules, holds significant technological interest. Motivated by the need to simulate liquid metal droplets with an oxidized surface layer, in this work, we introduce a computational scheme that allows us to simulate droplet dynamics with general surface properties and model different levels of interface stiffness, also describing cases that are intermediate between pure droplets and capsules. Our approach is based on a combination of the immersed boundary and the lattice Boltzmann methods. Here, we validate our approach against the theoretical predictions in the context of shear flow and static wetting properties, and we show its effectiveness in accessing the wetting dynamics, exploring the ability of the scheme to address a broad phenomenology
CMOS compatible integrated all-optical radio frequency spectrum analyzer
We report an integrated all-optical radio frequency spectrum analyzer based on a ~4cm long doped silica glass waveguide, with a bandwidth greater than 2.5 THz. We use this device to characterize the intensity power spectrum of ultrahighrepetition rate mode-locked lasers at repetition rates up to 400 GHz, and observe dynamic noise related behavior not observable with other technique
Broadband wavelength conversion at 40Gb/s using long serpentine As2S3 planar waveguides
We demonstrate broadband wavelength conversion of a 40 Gb/s
return-to-zero signal by cross-phase modulation in a newly developed
chalcogenide glass waveguide based photonic chip. These new serpentine
As2S3 waveguides offer a nonlinear coefficient â1700 W-1km-1 with 5Ă
lower propagation loss over a length of 22.5 cm which ensures the full
propagation length contributes towards the nonlinear process. This reduces
the peak operating power thereby allowing a Ă4 increase in the data rate
compared with previous results. Spectral measurements show the device
operates over a span of 40 nm while system measurements show just over 1
dB of power penalty at a bit-error rate of 10-9. This is primarily due to the
compact planar waveguide design which minimizes the effect of groupvelocity
dispersion
Dispersion engineered As2S3 planar waveguides for broadband four-wave mixing based wavelength conversion of 40 Gb/s signals
We demonstrate broadband wavelength conversion of a 40 Gb/s
return-to-zero signal using four-wave-mixing (FWM) in a dispersion
engineered chalcogenide glass waveguide. The 6 cm long planar rib
waveguide 2 ÎŒm wide was fabricated in a 0.87 ÎŒm thick film etched 350nm
deep to correspond to a design where waveguide dispersion offsets the
material leading to near-zero dispersion in the C-band and broadband phase
matched FWM. The reduced dimensions also enhance the nonlinear
coefficient to 9800 W-1km-1 at 1550 nm enabling broadband conversion in a
shorter device. In this work, we demonstrate 80 nm wavelength
conversions with 1.65 dB of power penalty at a bit-error rate of 10-9.
Spectral measurements and simulations indicate extended broadband
operation is possible
Single parameter optimization for simultaneous automatic compensation of multiple orders of dispersion for a 1.28 Tbaud signal
We report the demonstration of automatic higher-order dispersion compensation for the transmission of 275 fs pulses associated with a Tbaud Optical Time Division Multiplexed (OTDM) signal. Our approach achieves simultaneous automatic compensation for 2nd, 3rd and 4th order dispersion using an LCOS spectral pulse shaper (SPS) as a tunable dispersion compensator and a dispersion monitor made of a photonic-chip-based all-optical RF-spectrum analyzer. The monitoring approach uses a single parameter measurement extracted from the RF-spectrum to drive a multidimensional optimization algorithm. Because these pulses are highly sensitive to fluctuations in the GVD and higher orders of chromatic dispersion, this work represents a key result towards practical transmission of ultrashort optical pulses. The dispersion can be adapted on-the-fly for a 1.28 Tbaud signal at any place in the transmission line using a black box approach
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