797 research outputs found
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Flexible Multimode Polymer Waveguide Arrays for Versatile High-Speed Short-Reach Communication Links
Multimode polymer waveguides have attracted great interest for use in high-speed short-reach communication links as they can be cost-effectively integrated onto standard PCBs using conventional methods of the electronics industry and provide low loss (30 GHz×m) interconnection. The formation of such waveguides on flexible substrates can further provide flexible low-weight low-thickness interconnects and offer additional freedom in the implementation of high-speed short-reach optical links. These attributes make these flexible waveguides particularly attractive for use in low-cost detachable chip-to-chip links and in environments where weight and shape conformity become important, such as in cars and aircraft. However, the highly-multimoded nature of these waveguides raises important questions about their performance under severe flex due to mode loss and mode coupling. In this work therefore, we investigate the loss, crosstalk and bandwidth performance of such waveguides under out-of plane bending and in-plane twisting under different launch conditions and carry out data transmission tests at 40 Gb/s on a 1 m long spiral flexible waveguide under flexure. Excellent optical transmission characteristics are obtained while robust loss, crosstalk and bandwidth performance are demonstrated under flexure. Error-free (BER<10-12) 40 Gb/s data transmission is achieved over the 1 m long spiral waveguide for a 180° bend with a 4 mm radius. The obtained results demonstrate the excellent optical and mechanical properties of this technology and highlight its potential for use in real-world systems.Jaguar Land Rover, CAPE LEAS
Room temperature midinfrared electroluminescence from GaInAsSbP light emitting diodes. .
Room temperature electroluminescence in the midinfrared near 4 µm is reported from GaInAsSbP light emitting diodes grown on GaSb by liquid phase epitaxy. Comparison of the electro- and photoluminescence revealed that light is generated on the p side of the diode. The energy shift (24 meV) is consistent with band gap narrowing and recombination via band tail states due to the Zn doping (1×1018 cm−3) in the p layer of the structure. The temperature dependent behavior of the luminescence and the improved emission intensity was attributed to recombination from localized states arising from electrostatic potential fluctuations due to compositional inhomogeneities in these alloys
The Cosmological Gene Project: cluster analysis of the atmospheric fluctuations on arcmin-scale imaging of the Cosmic Microwave Background
We discuss some aspects of the Cosmological Gene Project started at the
Special Astrophysical Observatory (Russia) in 1999. The goal of the project is
to measure the anisotropy and polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background
(CMB) and investigation of atmospheric fluctuations and foreground on
arcmin-scales using the radio-telescope RATAN-600. We develop the cluster
analysis of one-dimensional random fields for the application to the RATAN-600
scans. We analyze the specific properties of peak clusterisation in the
RATAN-600 scans which to separate the primordial CMB signal from noise.Comment: Submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysic
Anomalous Magnetic Properties in Ni50Mn35In15
We present here a comprehensive investigation of the magnetic ordering in
Ni50Mn35In15 composition. A concomitant first order martensitic transition and
the magnetic ordering occurring in this off-stoichiometric Heusler compound at
room temperature signifies the multifunctional character of this magnetic shape
memory alloy. Unusual features are observed in the dependence of the
magnetization on temperature that can be ascribed to a frustrated magnetic
order. It is compelling to ascribe these features to the cluster type
description that may arise due to inhomogeneity in the distribution of magnetic
atoms. However, evidences are presented from our ac susceptibility, electrical
resistivity and dc magnetization studies that there exists a competing
ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic order within crystal structure of this
system. We show that excess Mn atoms that substitute the In atoms have a
crucial bearing on the magnetic order of this compound. These excess Mn atoms
are antiferromagnetically aligned to the other Mn, which explains the peculiar
dependence of magnetization on temperature.Comment: Accepted in J. Phys. D.:Appl. Physic
Pulse generation with ultra-superluminal pulse propagation in semiconductor heterostructures by superradiant-phase transition enhanced by transient coherent population gratings.
This paper reports the observation of ultra-superluminal pulse propagation in multiple-contact semiconductor heterostructures in a superradiant emission regime, and shows definitively that it is a different class of emission from conventional spontaneous or stimulated emission. Coherent population gratings induced in the semiconductor medium under strong electrical pumping have been shown to cause a major decrease of the group refractive index, in the range of 5-40%. This decrease is much greater than that caused by conventional carrier depletion or chirp mechanisms. The decrease in refractive index in turn causes faster-than-c propagation of femtosecond pulses. The measurement also proves the existence of coherent amplification of electromagnetic pulses in semiconductors at room temperature, the coherence being strongly enhanced by interactions of the light with coherent transient gratings locked to carrier gratings. This pulse-generation technique is anticipated to have great potential in applications where highly coherent femtosecond optical pulses must be generated on demand.We acknowledge support of the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research CouncilThis is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Nature Publishing Group via http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/lsa.2016.8
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Nonlinear optical effects during femtosecond superradiant emission generation in semiconductor laser structures.
This paper presents theoretical and experimental studies of ultrabright internal second harmonic during femtosecond superradiant emission generation in multiple sections GaAs/AlGaAs laser structures at room temperature. Experimentally measured conversion efficiencies are by 1-2 orders of magnitude greater than expected. To explain this fact, a model based on one-dimensional nonlinear Maxwell curl equations without taking into consideration the slowly-varying envelope approximation has been developed. It has been demonstrated that strong transient periodic modulation of e-h density and refraction index dramatically affects the process of superradiance in semiconductor media and can explain the ultrastrong internal second harmonic generation
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