168 research outputs found
Complex dynamics and configurational entropy of spatial optical solitons in nonlocal media
Intense light propagating in a nonlinear medium can generate an ensemble of
interacting filaments of light, or spatial solitons. Using nematic liquid
crystals, we demonstrate that they undergo a collective behavior typical of
complex systems, including the formation of clusters and sound-like vibrations,
as well as the reduction of the configurational entropy, controlled by the
degree of nonlocality of the medium.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures. Optics Letters, to be publishe
Space-time bullet trains via modulation instability and nonlocal solitons.
We introduce the generation of dense trains of light-bullets in nonlocal nonlinear dielectrics. We exploit stable spatio-temporal self-trapped optical packets stemming from the interplay between local electronic and nonlocal reorientational nonlinearities, considering a seeded temporal modulation instability by specifically referring to nematic liquid crystals
Signal processing by opto-optical interactions between self-localized and free propagating beams in liquid crystals
The reorientational nonlinearity of nematic liquid crystals enables a
self-localized spatial soliton and its waveguide to be deflected or destroyed
by a control beam propagating across the cell. We demonstrate a simple
all-optical readdressing scheme by exploiting the lens-like perturbation
induced by an external beam on both a nematicon and a co-polarized guided
signal of different wavelength. Angular steering as large as 2.2 degrees was
obtained for control powers as low as 32mW in the near infrared
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Time-resolved nonlinear ghost imaging
Terahertz (THz) spectroscopy systems are widely employed to retrieve the chemical and material composition of a sample. This is single-handed the most important driving motivation in the field and has largely contributed to shaping THz science as an independent subject. The limited availability of high-resolution imaging devices, however, still represents a major technological challenge in this promising field of research. In this theoretical work, we tackle this challenge by developing a novel nonlinear Ghost Imaging (GI) approach that conceptually outperforms established single-pixel imaging protocols at inaccessible wavelengths. Our methodology combines nonlinear THz generation with time-resolved field measurements, as enabled by state-of-the-art Time Domain Spectroscopy (TDS) techniques. As an ideal application target, we consider hyperspectral THz imaging of semi-transparent samples with nonnegligible delay contribution and we demonstrate how time-resolved, full-wave acquisition enables accurate spatiotemporal reconstruction of complex inhomogeneous samples
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Time-resolved nonlinear ghost imaging: route to hyperspectral single-pixel reconstruction of complex samples at THz frequencies
Terahertz (THz) is an innovative form of electromagnetic radiation providing unique spectroscopy capabilities in critical fields, ranging from biology to material science and security. The limited availability of high-resolution imaging devices, however, constitutes a major limitation in this field. In this work, we tackle this challenge by proposing an innovative type of time-space nonlinear Ghost-Imaging (GI) methodology that conceptually outperforms established single-pixel imaging protocols. Our methodology combines nonlinear pattern generation with time-resolved single-pixel measurements, as enabled by the state-of-the-art Time-Domain Spectroscopy (TDS) technique. This approach is potentially applicable to any wave-domain in which the field is a measurable quantity. The full knowledge of the temporal evolution of the transmitted field enables devising a new form of full-wave reconstruction process. This gives access not only to the morphological features of the sample with deeply subwavelength resolution but also to its local spectrum (hyperspectral imaging). As a target application, we consider hyperspectral THz imaging of a disordered inhomogeneous sample
Route to nonlocality and observation of accessible solitons
We develop a general theory of spatial solitons in a liquid crystalline
medium exhibiting a nonlinearity with an arbitrary degree of effective
nonlocality. The model accounts the observability of "accessible solitons" and
establishes an important link with parametric solitons.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Terahertz Faraday rotation in a magnetic liquid: High magneto-optical figure of merit and broadband operation in a ferrofluid
We report on the demonstration of a high figure of merit (FOM) Faraday rotation in a liquid in the terahertz (THz) regime. Using a ferrofluid, a high broadband rotation (11 mrad/mm) is experimentally demonstrated in the frequency range of 0.2–0.9 THz at room temperature. Given the low absorption of the liquid, a high magneto-optical figure of merit (5-16 rad.cm/T) is obtained
Characterization of high-speed balanced photodetectors
We report the characterization of a balanced ultrafast photodetector. For this purpose, we use a recently developed time-domain laser-based vector network analyzer (VNA) to determine the common-mode rejection ratio (CMRR) of the device under test. This includes the frequency-domain response above the single-mode frequency of the coaxial connector. Although the balanced photodetector has a nominal bandwidth of 43 GHz, it generates voltage pulses with frequency components up to 180 GHz. We obtain a CMRR of better than 30 dB up to 70 GHz and better than 20 dB up to 110 GHz. The laser-based measurements are compared with the measurements using a digital sampling oscilloscope and with the frequency-domain measurements using a conventional VNA. We obtain good agreement between the three techniques with the laser-based method providing the largest measurement bandwidth, although it also constitutes the most complicated characterization setup
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