The present invention relates to optical resonator systems and methods and more particularly to systems and methods with symmetry breaking of counter-propagating light waves in nonlinear optical resonators.
The paper: A. E. Kaplan, P. Meystre, Enhancement of the Sagnac effect due to nonlinearly induced nonreciprocity. Optics Letters. 6, 590-2 (1981), discloses a nonlinear ring interferometer in which nonlinearly induced nonreciprocity of counterpropagating waves are caused by the formation of an index grating in the nonlinear medium.
US 2003/0123780 A1 discloses the implementation of the Kerr effect in an integrated ring resonator in which waves propagate in opposite directions. Light travelling in one direction modulates the power in the other direction. The powers used are not high enough to produce symmetry breaking and there is no differential resonance shift.
A number of prior art documents disclose optical loop arrangements which are not resonators, for example WO 00/54080A, WO 2010/025258A1, JP H08334800A, U.S. Pat. No. 5,677,767A, and EP 3046191A1.
Aspects of the present invention seek to provide an efficient way of controlling light with light.
According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a resonator system comprising an optical loop resonator made of material with a non-reciprocal optical non-linearity such that the presence of counterpropagating light induces a stronger resonance frequency change than copropagating light of the same intensity, means for introducing first and second optical waves from at least one light source in opposite directions into the resonator at total intensities such as to produce a non-linear interaction between the first and second counterpropagating waves whereby to establish different resonant frequencies for the two different directions of light propagation.
The optical waves are produced by one or more lasers.
Preferably the first and second counterpropagating waves have respective resonance frequencies, the difference between the resonance frequencies being different from the difference, if any, between the frequencies of the first and second optical waves.
In embodiments of the invention, symmetry breaking corresponds to a resonance frequency splitting that allows only one of two counter-propagating (but otherwise identical) light waves to circulate in the resonator. Equivalently, the symmetry breaking can be seen as the collapse of standing waves and transition to travelling waves within the resonator. The resulting effects have the advantage of permitting a wide range of practical applications.
The non-linear interaction is preferably produced by the Kerr effect. Alternatively, it can be produced by another non-linear effect such as Brillouin scattering or Raman scattering, which would permit use of either ring or linear resonators. Alternatively the nonlinear effect could be produced by other optical nonlinearities that break the symmetry between counterpropagating light waves.
Preferably the resonator comprises a ring resonator and the waves are coupled into the resonator in clockwise and counterclockwise directions. The term “ring” does not imply that the resonator needs to be circular. An advantage of preferred embodiments of the present invention is that the resonator is monolithic and no mirrors are required.
The system preferably comprises a first arm for introducing the clockwise-propagating wave into the resonator and a second arm for introducing the counterclockwise-propagating wave into the resonator. The arms may be fed by a common laser source. This has the advantage of providing a compact, controllable device.
Alternatively, the arms may be fed by different light sources operating at the same or different frequencies that are resonant in the resonator.
With a common source, one of the arms preferably includes attenuating and/or modulating means, e.g. a Mach-Zehnder modulator. This allows modulation of the ratio of the light powers i.e. intensities, and/or the frequencies fed to the respective arms.
Each arm preferably comprises a respective light-separating means connected to a respective measurement means. The light-separating means separate the light coming from the resonator and enable the measurement of the clockwise and/or counterclockwise resonator powers of the resonator, e.g. using photodiodes. Alternatively, or in the addition the clockwise and counterclockwise frequencies or phases might be measured.
According to a second aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of producing different optical effects in opposite directions in an optical loop resonator made of material with a non-reciprocal optical non-linearity comprising introducing first and second optical waves into the resonator from at least one light source in opposite directions at total intensities such as to produce a non-linear interaction between the first and second waves whereby to establish different resonant frequencies between the first and second counterpropagating waves.
According to a third aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of adjusting the relative power between waves counterpropagating in a static optical resonator comprising coupling substantially identical waves into the resonator in opposite directions and with such a total intensity that a non-linear interaction occurs between the waves, wherein the resonator is subjected to an external effect which has a differing effect on the two waves and the difference is detected.
The non-linear interaction preferably involves the Kerr effect.
Preferably, the resonator is a ring resonator and the waves are coupled into the resonator in clockwise and counterclockwise directions.
The waves may be coupled into the resonator with different powers and/or frequencies and/or poliarization and/or coupling positions. This enables devices to be produced which act as optical flip-flops, binary memory units, power comparators, switchable circulators or isolators.
Alternatively, substantially identical waves may be coupled into the resonator and the resonator is subjected to an external effect which has a differing effect on the two waves and the difference is detected. The detected difference may be measured. This enables devices to be produced which serve as rotation sensors, proximity sensors, particle sensors or refractive index sensors.
The resonating system may be employed as a Sagnac effect sensor. The resonator may be rotatable relative to the other components of the system or substantially the whole system may be configured to rotate.
According to a fourth aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of adjusting the relative power between waves counterpropagating in an optical resonator which have such a total intensity that a non-linear interaction occurs between the waves, comprising the step of generating at least one of the counterpropagating waves within the resonator itself by means of a nonlinear optical effect or optical gain.
Embodiments of the present invention provide a method of operating an optical resonator having a cavity linewidth and comprising introducing first and second optical waves into the resonator in opposite directions at total intensities such as to produce a non-linear interaction between the waves and tuning the waves into a resonance that separates the resonance frequency in one direction by more than the cavity linewidth from the resonance frequency in the other direction.
The waves may be in the infrared, visible or ultra violet regions provided the optical resonator material is transparent at the required wavelength. The term “light” should be construed accordingly.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
The nonlinear interaction between counterpropagating light waves with powers PA and PB in a nonlinear Kerr medium 10 is illustrated in
with subscripts A,B indicating the two counterpropagating waves with power PA,B, n2 being the nonlinear refractive index of the medium and Aeff being the effective mode cross-section. It is important to note that the presence of a counter propagating light wave induces a two times stronger refractive index change compared to the self-phase-modulation induced refractive index change. Thus in view of the powers employed there is an effective doubling of the Kerr effect in the case of counter-propagating waves as contrasted with the normal Kerr effect employed in US 2003/0123780 A1.
In the case of an optical resonator with χ(3) nonlinearity, the difference in refractive index change leads to two different optical path lengths experienced by the counter propagating modes. This is reflected in a splitting of the resonance frequencies of the clockwise (CW) and counterclockwise (CCW) modes as shown in
Resonators in embodiments of the present invention preferably have a χ(3) nonlinearity with a nonlinear refractive index
n2>0.8×10−20 m2/W
In quantitative terms, the optical powers that are coupled into the clockwise and counterclockwise circulating modes of a whispering gallery resonator are given by the following coupled equations:
Here, Pin,CW and Pin,CCW are the incident pump powers, δ is the detuning of the laser frequency with respect to the resonance frequency without Kerr shift, γ is the loaded half-linewidth of the resonance, equal to the sum γ0+κ of the intrinsic and coupling induced half-linewidths, and η=4κγ0/γ2 is the coupling efficiency. The quantity P0=πn0 Aeff/(QF0n2) is the coupled power at which nonlinear effects occur. Here, n0 and n2 are the resonator's linear and nonlinear refractive indices, Aeff is the mode's effective cross-sectional area, Q is the loaded quality factor, and F0 is the intrinsic finesse. Importantly, equations (2,3) show that the nonlinear interaction with the counter-propagating light wave is twice as strong as the self-phase modulation induced interaction. This can be seen in the factor of two in the term PCW+2PCCW in equation (2). Moreover, an analysis of equations (2,3) show that for Pin,CW=Pin,CCW, symmetry breaking occurs when ηPin,CW/P0>8/(3√{square root over (3)})≈1.54 over a range of δ/γ that depends on the value of ηPin,CW/P0, and that at the threshold pump power, this range is limited to the single point−5/√{square root over (3)}≈−289.
An embodiment of the present invention is shown in
Preferred quality factors lie above 106 and preferably lie within the range 106 to 109. Preferred effective modal cross-sectional areas Aeff lie below 100 μm2 and preferably lie within the range 40 to 100 μm2.
Systems according to the present invention operate within the range 1 microwatt to 10 watts, preferably within the range 1 mW to 100 mW.
The spontaneous symmetry breaking is illustrated in
A feature of the bistable regime is hysteresis, which is shown in
Practical and theoretical results for the amplification of power imbalances are shown in
A fit of the maximum coupled power difference vs. total pump power Pin,T, as shown in
The above effects are summarized by the theoretical plot in
Various modifications can be made to the practical arrangements disclosed above. In addition to whispering-gallery-mode oscillators other nonlinear optical resonators can be employed providing they support counter propagating optical modes. For example the resonator may comprise one or more of a fibre-loop, a waveguide loop, a fibre cavity and/or a free-space cavity with nonlinear element. A particularly useful example is a chip-integrated photonic waveguide loop.
Instead of having a single common laser source 32, two laser sources may be employed, one for each counter-propagating wave.
Where a single laser source 32 is employed, the laser light may be split by one or more of an optical beam splitter, a fibre-based coupler, a waveguide coupler, a polarizing beam splitter, a birefringent material, a partially reflective mirror, a spatial light modulator, one or more gratings, and/or one or more wavelength-dependent multiplexers.
Instead of a tapered fibre 34, light can be coupled into and out of the resonator at one or more locations by one or more of a waveguide, a prism, free-space, an angle-cleaved fibre, a cleaved fibre, partially reflective mirrors, or by evanescent coupling techniques.
Instead of coupling light into the resonator, one or more of the light waves in the resonator can be generated by nonlinear optical effects or optical gain in the resonator itself. The nonlinear optical effects can be one or more of Raman scattering, Brillouin scattering, parametric down conversion, four-wave mixing, second harmonic generation, third harmonic generation, optical frequency comb generation, sum frequency generation, or difference frequency generation. Optical gain could be generated by doping the resonator material and pumping at a suitable wavelength. Instead of the Mach-Zehnder device 50, frequency differences between the counter-propagating light waves can be produced by another type of electro-optic modulator, an acoustic-optic modulator or by frequency or phase locking of one laser to another.
Losses or gains in the resonator can be effected by modifying its Q factor. It is possible to increase the losses of the resonator by placing an object in close proximity to it, of the order of 1 μm, to disturb the evanescent electric field of the resonant mode. One may also compensate losses with gain, e.g. by doping the resonator with atoms that emit light at the wavelength being used, such as erbium for 1550 nm, and pumping them.
Instead of circulators 36, 38 the light waves entering and exiting the resonator may be separated by other means, for example one or more of fibre couplers, waveguide couplers, dichroic mirrors, or by beam splitters, e.g. polarization beam splitters.
In all the embodiments of
One or more of the following properties of the light waves that leave the resonator (having interacted therewith) may be detected: power, phase, absolute frequency, frequency difference between counterpropagating light waves, polarisation, relative phase and/or relative power e.g. using a balanced photodiode.
The material of resonator 30 may comprise on or more of fused silica, silicon nitride, calcium fluoride, magnesium fluoride, silicon, crystalline silica, germanium oxide, barium oxide, water, aluminum gallium arsenide, diamond, sapphire, chalcogenide glasses, doped glasses, lithium niobate, zinc selenide, gallium selenide, zblan, fluorotellurite glasses and/or aluminum nitride, or other nonlinear optical materials.
The following are practical applications of embodiments of the present invention:
A) An optical diode. An optical diode or isolator is a two port device that allows the light to flow just in one direction. One such arrangement in shown in
The optical diode arrangement of
The same behavior can be obtained using ports 1 and 3 for the signals and ports 2 and 4 for the control light. Similar behavior can be obtained by using only two ports, for example 1 and 2. Sending control light into port 1 sets the system into the CW state in which light can pass from port 2 to 1 but not from 1 to 2.
If desired, additional ports can be used to select the direction.
Thus, this arrangement provides an all-optical switch or switchable optical diode.
B) An optical circulator. An optical circulator is a three port device that routes the light injected in the input to the common port and any light injected in the common port to the output port. Referring to
C) An optical flip-flop. This employs the hysteresis effect shown in
Referring again to
The pump light necessary to keep the device active and the signals light may have different frequencies.
The optical flip-flop can store a state line 1 and 0 (in this case CW and CCW) for an indefinite amount of time while it stays powered. It is possible to program this state on the device using only light beams, and to read it out if desired with photodiodes.
D) An optical power comparator. The device can be used to amplify optical power differences up to infinite gain where it behaves as a comparator, revealing which beam has higher power with an extraordinary sensitivity and accuracy greater than differential photodiodes. Here the system is operated in the region of the one of lines 202, 204 in
E) A proximity sensor in the optical near field. The system of
F) A refractive index sensor. The device can be used to sense changes in refractive index of a material placed close to the microresonator in a similar way to application E).
G) A single particle sensor. Similarly to applications E) and F), any particle in contact with the resonator modifies its characteristics and can therefore be detected.
H) An all-optical oscillator. Competition between the counter-propagating waves leads to an oscillator that produces pulsating light fed by continuous-wave light.
I) A power limiter. A fraction of the incoming light is coupled in the opposite direction; when a certain power level is reached, saturation occurs. At least one more arm may be added to the system to measure the effective power on that arm, and using a feedback arrangement to stabilize that power.
J) An enhanced rotation sensor. The Sagnac effect creates a shift of the resonance frequency for light travelling in opposite directions in a rotating setup proportional to the speed and the area enclosed by the optical path. The nonlinearity in the resonator enhances the shift induced by the Sagnac effect. Furthermore the high Q-factor makes the light travel thousands of turns inside the resonator increasing the effective path length and associated area. Splittings in the resonance frequency due to the Sagnac effect are amplified, enabling a form of optical gyroscope to be built. In contrast to the system disclosed in the above-mentioned Kaplan paper, only the resonator 30 and its adjacent couplings need to rotate; the remainder of the system can remain static. The counter-propagation of the waves occurs exclusively within the resonator 30, so that it is the resonator itself which senses the rotation. Unlike in Kaplan's arrangement, the resonator is a waveguide ring resonator or whispering gallery rersonator and does not consist of four mirrors forming an optical cavity (with a gas or vacuum as medium).
K) Logic elements. Using
An advantage of all the various practical applications of embodiments of the invention is that they can be integrated on a photonic chip.
The features of the various embodiments and modifications described, and of the claims, may be substituted for each other or combined as desired.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1611046.2 | Jun 2016 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/GB2017/051848 | 6/23/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2017/221028 | 12/28/2017 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4533249 | Webber | Aug 1985 | A |
5537671 | Toyama | Jul 1996 | A |
6643023 | Honda | Nov 2003 | B2 |
7903255 | Kaplan | Mar 2011 | B2 |
9128246 | Hafezi | Sep 2015 | B2 |
9772189 | Strandjord | Sep 2017 | B2 |
20030123780 | Fischer | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20090027754 | Steinberg | Jan 2009 | A1 |
20100002283 | Sanders | Jan 2010 | A1 |
20150116802 | Agrawal | Apr 2015 | A1 |
Entry |
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Kaplan et al., “Directionally Asymmetrical Bistability in a Symmetrically Pumped Nonlinear Ring Interferometer,” Optics Comms., vol. 40, No. 3, pp. 229-232 (Jan. 1, 1982). |
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International Search Report and Written Opinion with respect to PCT/GB2017/051848 (dated Oct. 13, 2017). |
Kaplan, A.E. et al., “Enhancement of the Sagnac Effect Due to Nonlinearly Induced Nonreciprocity,” Optics Letters, vol. 6, No. 12, pp. 590-592 (Dec. 1, 1981). |
Kaplan, A.E. et al., “Directionally Asymmetrical Bistability in a Symmetrically Pumped Nonlinear Ring Interferometer,” Optics Communications, vol. 40, No. 3, pp. 229-232 (Jan. 1, 1982). |
Wang, Chao et al., “A Nonlinear Microresonator Refractive Index Sensor,” J. of Lightwave Tech., vol. 33, No. 20, pp. 4360-4366 (Oct. 15, 2015). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20190129276 A1 | May 2019 | US |