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This PDF file contains the front matter associated with SPIE
Proceedings Volume 7612, including the Title Page, Copyright
information, Table of Contents, and the Conference Committee listing.
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We have developed an all-fiber system which we use to demonstrate slow and fast light based on electromagnetically
induced transparency in a 20 meter acetylene-filled photonic microcell. Using this system, 30 ns pulses of probe light
were delayed and advanced by up to 5 ns and 1 ns respectively. The delay/advance is tunable through the probe detuning
and the coupling Rabi frequency. Through optimization of experimental parameters such as acetylene pressure, coupling
laser power and decoherence rates it is shown that a pulse delay of 30 ns/m is possible. Limitations imposed on the fiber
length by resonance group velocity dispersion and spectral reshaping are also discussed. In addition to optical buffering,
we suggest a slow-light based fiber optical gyroscope with an enhanced signal-to-noise ratio of ~ 92.
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Seeding Brillouin scattering with a sufficiently efficient source of coherent phonons has the potential to produce
energy-sensitive photon detectors. Based on this idea, we propose and analyze some possible designs for such a
detector.
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Slow-light technology via stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) in an optical fiber has attracted a lot of attention owing
to its flexible gain spectrum tailoring capacity, good compatibility with existing telecommunication systems, and great
application for photonic switchers and routers in ultra-high-speed photonic networks. In this paper we present a general
theoretical model for analyzing the dynamic behavior of the nonlinear interactions of the transient SBS process based on
the three-wave coupled-amplitude equations for the pump, Stokes and acoustic waves. Spatial and temporal evolution of
a generating slow-light pulse with the duration of sub-nanosecond under double broadband pump case is accurately
simulated owing to the fact that our model includes the second-order derivative of the acoustic field. We conclude that
the origin of the pulse broadening and distortion can be explained in terms of the temporal decay of the induced acoustic
field.
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We report experimental study of laser phase noise to intensity noise conversion in electromagnetically induced
transparency. In particular, we studied how various experimental parameters such as one and two-photon
detunings and optical depth affect the intensity noise spectrum. Connection between the intensity noise level
and the intensity cross correlation between the two EIT fields was also investigated.
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In this manuscript predicted delay is developed for a pulse propagating through an atomic vapor. Theoretical
description for pulse delay is developed from atomic absorption coefficient with hyperfine structure and Voigt
lineshape. Predicted delays are in agreement with observed delays in a cesium vapor cell at various temperatures
between 78.9°C and 137.2°C.
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This paper reviews a number of optical gyroscope architectures utilizing either slow or fast light that have been recently
proposed in the literature to enhance rotation sensitivity, with a view to separate the schemes that offer a genuine
enhancement from the ones that do not. The overall conclusion is that although slow-light coupled-resonator systems
have interesting applications in other fields, for example for filtering or switching, none of the schemes proposed to date
enable any enhancement in rotation sensitivity. Simple guidelines are outlined in an attempt to help clear misconceptions
and hopefully reduce the number of erroneous publications on this subject in the future. On the other hand, fast light in a
ring laser gyro can potentially enhance rotation sensitivity by up to six orders of magnitude. Future research directions
likely to be fruitful are also outlined.
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We study the dispersion properties of a microring/microdisk based CROW delay line. We show that despite the double
degeneracy of the individual resonators, the Bloch modes of the CROW split into non-degenerate symmetric and antisymmetric
branches. Depending on the inter-resonator gap and the angular modal number, these distinct branches may
not overlap at all, thus suppressing the propagation of whispering gallery modes based Bloch waves. The impact of the
additional (modal) dispersion on the achievable delays and the penalty on communication link are studied it detail. The
dispersion cause by the symmetry of Bloch modes symmetry is found to be substantial, especially for ultra-compact
CROWs, and may result in substantial performance degradation if not taken into account.
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The phenomenon of all-optical Ramsey interference using pulsed coherent population trapping
(CPT) beams provides a new avenue for developing frequency standards using atomic vapor. In
this study, we show that frequency narrowed Ramsey fringes can be produced in rubidium vapor
without the effect of power broadening. We observed fringes of width as narrow as 1 kHz using
a buffer-gas filled rubidium cell. A compact injection-locked laser (ILL) system was used to
generate CPT beams. Studies also show that ac Stark effect on Ramsey fringes can be reduced,
and higher frequency stability can be achieved in a clock application. The results are
encouraging to propose an architecture for development of a pulsed CPT Ramsey clock. In this
paper, we also provide related discussions on clock frequency stability, and our plans for future
experiments.
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Linear and non-linear interactions in electromagnetically induced transparency and related pump-probe optical
phenomena involving moving many-electron atomic systems are investigated using a reduced-density-matrix approach.
Time-domain (equation-of-motion) and frequency-domain (resolvent-operator) formulations are developed in a unified
manner. The standard Born (lowest-order perturbation-theory) and Markov (short-memory-time) approximations are
systematically introduced within the framework of the general non-perturbative and non-Markovian formulations. A
preliminary semiclassical perturbation-theory treatment of the electromagnetic interaction is adopted. However, it is
emphasized that a quantized-electromagnetic-field approach is essential for a self-consistent quantum-mechanical
formulation. Our primary result is the derivation of compact Liouville-space operator expressions for the linear and the
general (n'th order) non-linear macroscopic electromagnetic-response tensors. These expressions can be evaluated for
coherent initial atomic excitations and for the full tetradic-matrix form of the Liouville-space self-energy operator
representing the environmental interactions in the Markov approximation. Collisional interactions between atoms can be
treated in various approximations for the self-energy operator, and the influence of Zeeman coherences on the
electromagnetic-pulse propagation can be investigated by including an applied magnetic field on an equal footing with
the electromagnetic fields.
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Thomas F. Krauss, Liam O'Faolain, Sebastian Schulz, Daryl M. Beggs, Francesco Morichetti, Antonio Canciamilla, M. Torregiani, Andrea Melloni, Simon Mazoyer, et al.
We study propagation losses in slow light photonic crystal waveguides and show that dispersion engineering can reduce the loss. We
develop an improved understanding of why and how this occurs and develop an new approach to modeling these devices that provides
new design insights.
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We demonstrate, theoretically and experimentally, that the modes of coupled cavities created in periodic waveguides
can depend critically on the lateral shift between the cavities. In the absence of such shift, the modes
feature symmetric or antisymmetric profiles, and their frequency splitting generally increases as the cavities are
brought closer. We show that the longitudinal shift enables flexible control over the fundamental modes, which
frequency detuning can be reduced down to zero. Our coupled-mode theory analysis reveals an intrinsic link
between the mode tuning and the transformation of slow-light dispersion at the photonic band-edge. We illustrate
our approach through direct numerical modelling of cavities created in arrays of dielectric rods, nanobeam
structures, and two-dimensional photonic-crystal waveguides. We also present experimental results for coupled
rod cavities confirming our predictions.
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We demonstrate a fast optical correlator using tunable delay of slow light in chirped photonic crystal coupled waveguide.
Laser heating was performed for the tuning with a response speed up to several kHz. We clearly observed the crosscorrelation
trace of 1.8 ps pulses. The tuning range was limited up to 8.7 ps, but will be extended to several 10 ps by long
length devices. As the response is >100 times faster than conventional mechanical methods, the device is suitable for fast
data mapping in optical correlation systems such as OCT.
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Slow Light in Microresonators and Semiconductor Structures
We theoretically analyze the light-storing process in optical microresonator arrays. We propose a passive and
an active schemes to strongly slow light. The two mechanisms rely on microresonator chains whose high order
dispersion is optimized. The unit cell of the systems is a short sequence of two or four resonators. In the passive
process we show that the cancellation of the third order of dispersion allows the propagation of short pulses with
no significant distortion in a microresonator array. The second process needs the use of active microresonators
whose loss and gain are dynamically tuned. The structure is made of only four resonators and is optimized to
avoid pulse distortion as it is the case in the passive scheme. The loss and gain modulations allow the resonant
structure to be isolated from the access waveguide and optical pulse to be stored.
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Structural imperfections in fabricated microring resonators make post-fabrication tuning of rings useful in order to obtain
desired transmission, phase and delay characteristics. Optical trimming of polymer microrings has been demonstrated
using photobleaching. Here we investigate post-fabrication tuning of silicon-on-insulator microrings and microring
based devices, including aligning the resonant frequencies of rings, and tuning the coupling coefficients.
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We developed a predictive model describing harmonic generation and intermodulation distortions in semiconductor
optical amplifiers (SOAs). This model takes into account the variations of the saturation parameters
along the propagation axis inside the SOA, and uses a rigorous expression of the gain oscillations harmonics.
We derived the spurious-free dynamic range (SFDR) of a slow light delay line based on coherent population
oscillation (CPO) effects, in a frequency range covering radar applications (from 40 kHz up to 30 GHz), and for
a large range of injected currents. The influence of the high order distortions in the input microwave spectrum
is discussed, and in particular, an interpretation of the SFDR improvement of a Mach-Zehnder modulator by
CPOs effects in a SOA is given.
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Slow Light in Metamaterials and Other Complex Media
We review recent theoretical and experimental breakthroughs in the realm of slow and stopped light in structured
photonic media featuring negative electromagnetic parameters (permittivity/permeability and/or refractive index). We
explain how and why these structures can enable complete stopping of light even in the presence of disorder and,
simultaneously, dissipative losses. Using full-wave numerical simulations we show that the incorporation of thin layers
made of an active medium adjacently to the core layer of a negative-refractive-index waveguide can completely remove
dissipative losses - in a slow-light regime where the effective index of the guided wave is negative. We, also, review and
compare several 'trapped rainbow' schemes that have recently been proposed for slowing and stopping light.
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