397 research outputs found
Studies of laser and laser devices
The generation of tunable, infrared, and ultraviolet light, and the control of this light by mode-locking and modulation techniques are discussed. Particular emphasis is given to energy storage and extraction using atomic levels, the development of a tunable narrowband vacuum ultraviolet light source, and to the generation and applications of ultrashort optical pulses
Studies on lasers and laser devices
The goal of this grant was to study lasers, laser devices, and uses of lasers for investigating physical phenomena are studied. The active projects included the development of a tunable, narrowband XUV light source and its application to the spectroscopy of core excited atomic states, and the development of a technique for picosecond time resolution spectroscopy of fast photophysical processes
Discrete diffraction and shape-invariant beams in optical waveguide arrays
General properties of linear propagation of discretized light in homogeneous
and curved waveguide arrays are comprehensively investigated and compared to
those of paraxial diffraction in continuous media. In particular, general laws
describing beam spreading, beam decay and discrete far-field patterns in
homogeneous arrays are derived using the method of moments and the steepest
descend method. In curved arrays, the method of moments is extended to describe
evolution of global beam parameters. A family of beams which propagate in
curved arrays maintaining their functional shape -referred to as discrete
Bessel beams- is also introduced. Propagation of discrete Bessel beams in
waveguide arrays is simply described by the evolution of a complex
parameter similar to the complex parameter used for Gaussian beams in
continuous lensguide media. A few applications of the parameter formalism
are discussed, including beam collimation and polygonal optical Bloch
oscillations. \Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Influence of the ESR saturation on the power sensitivity of cryogenic sapphire resonators
Here, we study the paramagnetic ions behavior in presence of a strong
microwave electromagnetic field sustained inside a cryogenic sapphire
whispering gallery mode resonator. The high frequency measurement resolution
that can be now achieved by comparing two CSOs permit for the first time to
observe clearly the non-linearity of the resonator power sensitivity. These
observations that in turn allow us to optimize the CSO operation, are well
explained by the Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) saturation of the paramagnetic
impurities contained in the sapphire crystal.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
Non-critically squeezed light via spontaneous rotational symmetry breaking
We theoretically address squeezed light generation through the spontaneous
breaking of the rotational invariance occuring in a type I degenerate optical
parametric oscillator (DOPO) pumped above threshold. We show that a DOPO with
spherical mirrors, in which the signal and idler fields correspond to first
order Laguerre-Gauss modes, produces a perfectly squeezed vacuum with the shape
of a Hermite-Gauss mode, within the linearized theory. This occurs at any
pumping level above threshold, hence the phenomenon is non-critical.
Imperfections of the rotational symmetry, due e.g. to cavity anisotropy, are
shown to have a small impact, hence the result is not singular.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, replaced with resubmitted versio
Non-Gaussian statistics and extreme waves in a nonlinear optical cavity
A unidirectional optical oscillator is built by using a liquid crystal
light-valve that couples a pump beam with the modes of a nearly spherical
cavity. For sufficiently high pump intensity, the cavity field presents a
complex spatio-temporal dynamics, accompanied by the emission of extreme waves
and large deviations from the Gaussian statistics. We identify a mechanism of
spatial symmetry breaking, due to a hypercycle-type amplification through the
nonlocal coupling of the cavity field
Injection locking of a low cost high power laser diode at 461 nm
Stable laser sources at 461 nm are important for optical cooling of strontium
atoms. In most existing experiments this wavelength is obtained by frequency
doubling infrared lasers, since blue laser diodes either have low power or
large emission bandwidths. Here, we show that injecting less than 10 mW of
monomode laser radiation into a blue multimode 500 mW high power laser diode is
capable of slaving at least 50% of the power to the desired frequency. We
verify the emission bandwidth reduction by saturation spectroscopy on a
strontium gas cell and by direct beating of the slave with the master laser. We
also demonstrate that the laser can efficiently be used within the Zeeman
slower for optical cooling of a strontium atomic beam.Comment: 2nd corrected version (minor revisions); Manuscript accepted for
publication in Review of Scientific Instruments; 5 pages, 6 figure
Maser Oscillation in a Whispering-Gallery-Mode Microwave Resonator
We report the first observation of above-threshold maser oscillation in a
whispering-gallery(WG)-mode resonator, whose quasi-transverse-magnetic, 17th
azimuthal-order WG mode, at a frequency of approx. 12.038 GHz, with a loaded Q
of several hundred million, is supported on a cylinder of mono-crystalline
sapphire. An electron spin resonance (ESR) associated with Fe3+ ions, that are
substitutively included within the sapphire at a concentration of a few parts
per billion, coincides in frequency with that of the (considerably narrower) WG
mode. By applying a c.w. `pump' to the resonator at a frequency of approx.
31.34 GHz, with no applied d.c. magnetic field, the WG (`signal') mode is
energized through a three-level maser scheme. Preliminary measurements
demonstrate a frequency stability (Allan deviation) of a few times 1e-14 for
sampling intervals up to 100 s.Comment: REVTeX v.4, 3 pages, with a separate .bbl file and 3 .eps figure
Quantitative atomic spectroscopy for primary thermometry
Quantitative spectroscopy has been used to measure accurately the
Doppler-broadening of atomic transitions in Rb vapor. By using a
conventional platinum resistance thermometer and the Doppler thermometry
technique, we were able to determine with a relative uncertainty of
, and with a deviation of from the
expected value. Our experiment, using an effusive vapour, departs significantly
from other Doppler-broadened thermometry (DBT) techniques, which rely on weakly
absorbing molecules in a diffusive regime. In these circumstances, very
different systematic effects such as magnetic sensitivity and optical pumping
are dominant. Using the model developed recently by Stace and Luiten, we
estimate the perturbation due to optical pumping of the measured value
was less than . The effects of optical pumping on atomic and
molecular DBT experiments is mapped over a wide range of beam size and
saturation intensity, indicating possible avenues for improvement. We also
compare the line-broadening mechanisms, windows of operation and detection
limits of some recent DBT experiments
Non-relativistic limit in the 2+1 Dirac Oscillator: A Ramsey Interferometry Effect
We study the non-relativistic limit of a paradigmatic model in Relativistic
Quantum Mechanics, the two-dimensional Dirac oscillator. Remarkably, we find a
novel kind of Zitterbewegung which persists in this non-relativistic regime,
and leads to an observable deformation of the particle orbit. This effect can
be interpreted in terms of a Ramsey Interferometric phenomenon, allowing an
insightful connection between Relativistic Quantum Mechanics and Quantum
Optics. Furthermore, subsequent corrections to the non-relativistic limit,
which account for the usual spin-orbit Zitterbewegung, can be neatly understood
in terms of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer.Comment: RevTex4 file, color figures, submitted for publicatio
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