173 research outputs found
Soliton excitation in waveguide arrays with an effective intermediate dimensionality
We reveal and observe experimentally significant modifications undertaken by
discrete solitons in waveguide lattices upon the continuous transformation of
the lattice structure from one-dimensional to two-dimensional. Light evolution
and soliton excitation in arrays with a gradually increasing number of rows are
investigated, yielding solitons with an effective reduced dimensionality
residing at the edge and in the bulk of the lattice.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Physical Review Letter
Resonantly enhanced second-harmonic generation using III-V semiconductor all-dielectric metasurfaces
Nonlinear optical phenomena in nanostructured materials have been challenging
our perceptions of nonlinear optical processes that have been explored since
the invention of lasers. For example, the ability to control optical field
confinement, enhancement, and scattering almost independently, allows nonlinear
frequency conversion efficiencies to be enhanced by many orders of magnitude
compared to bulk materials. Also, the subwavelength length scale renders phase
matching issues irrelevant. Compared with plasmonic nanostructures, dielectric
resonator metamaterials show great promise for enhanced nonlinear optical
processes due to their larger mode volumes. Here, we present, for the first
time, resonantly enhanced second-harmonic generation (SHG) using Gallium
Arsenide (GaAs) based dielectric metasurfaces. Using arrays of cylindrical
resonators we observe SHG enhancement factors as large as 104 relative to
unpatterned GaAs. At the magnetic dipole resonance we measure an absolute
nonlinear conversion efficiency of ~2X10^(-5) with ~3.4 GW/cm2 pump intensity.
The polarization properties of the SHG reveal that both bulk and surface
nonlinearities play important roles in the observed nonlinear process
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Quasi-linearly polarized hybrid modes in tapered and metal-coated tips with circular apertures: understanding the functionality of aperture tips
In this study, we investigate analytically and experimentally the roles of quasi-linearly polarized (LP), hybrid, plasmonic and photonic modes in optical detection and excitation with aperture tips in scanning near-field optical microscopy. Aperture tips are tapered and metal-coated optical fibers where small circular apertures are made at the apex. In aperture tips, there exist plasmonic modes that are bound at the interface of the metal cladding to the inner dielectric fiber and photonic modes that are guided in the area of the increased index in the dielectric fiber core. The fundamental photonic mode, although excited by the free-space Gaussian beam, experiences cutoff and turns into an evanescent mode. The photonic mode also becomes lossier than the plasmonic mode toward the tip aperture, and its power decay due to absorption and reflection is expected to be at least 10−9. In contrast, the fundamental plasmonic mode has no cutoff and thus reaches all the way to the tip aperture. Due to the non-adiabaticity of both modes' propagations through the taper below a core radius of 600 nm, there occurs coupling between the modes. The transmission efficiency of the plasmonic mode, including the coupling efficiency and the propagation loss, is expected to be about 10−6 that is at least 3 orders of magnitude larger than that of the photonic mode. Toward the tip aperture, the longitudinal field of the photonic mode becomes stronger than the transverse ones while the transverse fields always dominate for the plasmonic mode. Experimentally, we obtain polarization resolved images of the near-field at the tip aperture and compare with the x- and y-components of the fundamental quasi-LP plasmonic and photonic modes. The results show that not only the pattern but also the intensity ratios of the x- and y-components of the aperture near-field match with that of the fundamental plasmonic mode. Consequently, we conclude that only the plasmonic mode reaches the tip aperture and thus governs the near-field interaction outside the tip aperture. Our conclusion remains valid for all aperture tips regardless of the cladding metal type that mainly influences the total transmission efficiency of the aperture tip
Contribution of the magnetic resonance to the third harmonic generation from a fishnet metamaterial
We investigate experimentally and theoretically the third harmonic generated
by a double-layer fishnet metamaterial. To unambiguously disclose most notably
the influence of the magnetic resonance, the generated third harmonic was
measured as a function of the angle of incidence. It is shown experimentally
and numerically that when the magnetic resonance is excited by pump beam, the
angular dependence of the third harmonic signal has a local maximum at an
incidence angle of {\theta} \simeq 20{\deg}. This maximum is shown to be a
fingerprint of the antisymmetric distribution of currents in the gold layers.
An analytical model based on the nonlinear dynamics of the electrons inside the
gold shows excellent agreement with experimental and numerical results. This
clearly indicates the difference in the third harmonic angular pattern at
electric and magnetic resonances of the metamaterial.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Observation of two-dimensional lattice interface solitons
We report on the experimental observation of two-dimensional solitons at the
interface between square and hexagonal waveguide arrays. In addition to the
different symmetry of the lattices, the influence of a varying refractive index
modulation depth is investigated. Such variation strongly affects the
properties of surface solitons residing at different sides of the interface.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Optics Letter
Определение эффективности нейтронного детектора из пластического сцинтиллятора o100?200 мм
Рассчитывается и экспериментально проверяется эффективность детектора. к нейтронам сверхвысоких (десятки и сотни МэВ) энергий
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Merging Top-Down and Bottom-Up Approaches to Fabricate Artificial Photonic Nanomaterials with a Deterministic Electric and Magnetic Response
Artificial photonic nanomaterials made from densely packed scatterers are frequently realized either by top-down or bottom-up techniques. While top-down techniques offer unprecedented control over achievable geometries for the scatterers, by trend they suffer from being limited to planar and periodic structures. In contrast, materials fabricated with bottom-up techniques do not suffer from such disadvantages but, unfortunately, they offer only little control on achievable geometries for the scatterers. To overcome these limitations, a nanofabrication strategy is introduced that merges both approaches. A large number of scatterers are fabricated with a tailored optical response by fast character projection electron-beam lithography and are embedded into a membrane. By peeling-off this membrane from the substrate, scrambling, and densifying it, a bulk material comprising densely packed and randomly arranged scatterers is obtained. The fabrication of an isotropic material from these scatterers with a strong electric and magnetic response is demonstrated. The approach of this study unlocks novel opportunities to fabricate nanomaterials with a complex optical response in the bulk but also on top of arbitrarily shaped surfaces. © 2019 The Authors. Published by WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinhei
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