This application is related to Application No. 11/001,492, filed Nov. 30, 2004. entitled “Ultra-slow Down and Storage of Light Pulses, and Altering of Pulse Spectrum,” by Mehmet Fatih Yanik and Shanhui Fan. The related application is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The ability to stop a light pulse, while completely preserving quantum coherent information encoded in the pulse, has profound implications for classical and quantum information processing See R. Ramaswami, K. N. Sivarajan, Optical Networks: “A Practical Perspective”, Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco, Calif., 1998; M. D. Lukin, A. Imamoglu, Nature 413, 273 (2001); L. M. Duan, M. D. Lukin, J. I. Cirac, P. Zoller, Nature, 414, 413 (2001); M. Fleischhauer, M. D. Lukin, Phys. Rev. A. 65, 022314 (2002); and M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 083901 (2004). Up to now, most experimental demonstrations of stopping light rely upon the use of Electromagnetic Induced Transparency (EIT). In these experiments, a light pulse is stopped by completely or partially transferring the optical information to coherent electronic states See M. D. Lukin, S. F. Yelin, and M. Fleischhauer, Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 4232 (2000); C. Liu, Z. Dutton, C. H. Behroozi, L. V. Hau, Nature 409, 490 (2001); and D. F. Phillips, A. Fleischhauer, A. Mair, R. L. Walsworth, M. D. Lukin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 783 (2001). The use of electronic states, however, severely limits applications, due to the stringent conditions required to maintain electronic coherence.
Since EIT spectrum results from the interference of resonant pathways, it has been recently recognized that similar interference effects also occur in classical systems such as plasma and electric circuits. See S. E. Harris, Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 5357 (1996); and A. G. Litvak, M. D. Tokman, Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 095003 (2002). In particular, EIT-like transmission spectra have been observed in static optical resonators. See D. D. Smith, H. Chang, K. A. Fuller, A. T. Rosenberger, R. W. Boyd, Phys. Rev. A 69, 63804 (2004); L. Maleki, A. B. Matsho, A. A. Savchenkov, V. S. Ilchenko, Opt. Lett. 29, 626 (2004); and W. Suh, Z. Wang, S. Fan, IEEE J. Quantum Electronics (in press). To stop light, however, a static resonator system alone is not sufficient—any such resonator system is fundamentally limited by the delay-bandwidth constraint [see G. Lenz, B. J. Eggleton, C. K. Madsen, R. E. Slusher, IEEE J. Quantum Electronics 37, 525 (2001); and Z. Wang, S. Fan, Phys. Rev. E, 68, 066616 (2003)] and cannot bring the group velocity of an optical pulse to zero. See M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 083901 (2004); and M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, submitted to Phys. Rev. A. Critically, one needs to develop the correct dynamic process that allows the bandwidth of the pulse to be adiabatically compressed to zero. See M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 083901 (2004); and M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, submitted to Phys. Rev. A. Yanik and Fan recently showed one such dynamic process based upon band anticrossing mechanism in Coupled Resonator Optical Waveguides (CROW) See M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 083901 (2004).
We propose a system for affecting a wave pulse of a type, said pulse having frequency components. A medium having a bandwidth that can initially accommodate the frequency components of the wave pulse at a group velocity is employed. The medium comprises a waveguide and a first and a second linear sequence of resonators, each sequence side coupled to the waveguide. The spectrum of the pulse is altered after the pulse has entered the medium so that information in the pulse is substantially preserved, wherein the pulse is of said type before and after the alteration, so that the spectrum of the pulse is modulated.
a), 2(b) and 2(c) are graphical plots of the photonic bands of the system of
a and 3b illustrate propagation of an optical pulse through a waveguide-resonator complex in a photonic crystal system as the resonant frequencies of the cavities are varied. The photonic crystal consists of 100 cavity pairs. Fragments of the photonic crystal are shown in part b. The three fragments correspond to unit cells 12–013, 55–56, 97-98. The dots indicate the positions of the dielectric rods. The black dots represent the cavities.
In
We theoretically and numerically demonstrate a new and optimal mechanism for stopping light, by constructing a system comprising a waveguide side-coupled to optical resonators, and by modulating the refractive index of the resonators to dynamically compress photon bandwidth. We prove that the group velocity of light can be reduced to absolute zero, with only two resonators per unit cell, due to the presence of EIT-like interference effects. We also show that in such a system, the adiabatic bandwidth compression process is protected by the presence of a large photonic band gap, which makes a fast compression process possible.
We consider a translationally invariant system 10 (
as:
The transmission matrix through an entire unit cell in
T=Tc
where
is the transmission matrix for a waveguide section of length li; Here, β is the wavevector of the waveguide at a given frequency ω.
Since det(T)=1, the eigenvalues of T can be represented as eikl,e−ikl, where l=l1+l2 is the length of the unit cell, and k (when it is real) corresponds to the Bloch wavevector of the entire system. Therefore, we obtain the band diagram of the system as:
where
In the frequency range where |f(ω)|<1, the system supports propagating modes, while |f(ω)|>1 corresponds to the frequency ranges of the photonic band gaps. For a large frequency separation Δ=|ωA−ωB|τ, the band diagram is shown in
The width of the middle band depends strongly on the resonant frequencies ωA, ωB. Importantly, when the resonant frequencies satisfy the following conditions, the width of the middle band becomes zero (
(Alternatively, the band can be pined at ωB with a similar condition). To prove these conditions, we note that f(ω) in Eq. (3) has a singularity at ω=ωA. The frequency width of this singularity is controlled by C+(ωA), and approaches zero when Eq. (4) is satisfied. Satisfying Eq. (5), on the other hand, ensures that the solutions to |f(ω)|≦1 in the vicinity of ωA occurs on the same branch of the singularity 1/(ω−ωA), and thus forms a continuous band. When both conditions are satisfied, as the width of the singularity approaches zero, a band (the middle band in
In the presence of direct coupling due to photon tunneling between the two cavities in the same unit cell, one could still describe the system in terms of two resonant eigenstates within each unit cell. The dispersion can be expressed in the same functional form as of equation (3) with ωA and ωB in the denominator replaced by the frequencies of the eigenstates. And bandwidth compression to zero still occurs when Δ satisfies conditions analogous to that of equations (4) & (5). This is also supported by our numerical observations that the sign of the band flips. In addition, in photonic crystals the direct coupling constant decreases exponentially with the distance between the cavities, and can therefore be reduced to any desired value in our system since the cavities are not across each other along the waveguide. Our simulations also indicate that even in the presence of loss, extremely flat band is obtainable, and the sign of the band still flips, which is consistent with our previous finding in a different system. See M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 083901 (2004). In general, it appears that the group velocity becomes independent of the loss when the losses of different sub-systems are matched. See M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 083901 (2004); and M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, submitted to Phys. Rev. A.
The system presented above satisfies the general criterion required to stop light. See M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 083901 (2004). The system is translationally invariant, and the width of one of the bands can be reversibly compressed to zero. Thus, the dynamic process in M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 083901 (2004) can also be applied here to stop a light pulse. We start with large Δ, such that the middle band has a large bandwidth, and ωA, ωB are chosen such that this band can accommodate the incoming pulse, with each spectral component of the pulse occupying a unique wavevector (
We implement the system presented above in a photonic crystal of a square lattice of dielectric rods (n=3.5) with a radius of 0.2a, (a is the lattice constant) embedded in air (n=1) (
We simulate the entire process of stopping light for N=100 pairs of cavities with finite-difference-time-domain (FDTD) method which solves Maxwell's equations without approximation. See A. Taflove and S. C. Hagness, Computational Electrodynamics (Artech House, Norwood Mass. 2000. The computational cell is truncated by uniaxial perfectly matched boundary layers (UPML). Furthermore, we have used a large enough computational cell such that the result is free of any parasitic reflection from the right end of the computational boundary. The dynamic process for stopping light is shown in
Unlike the previously proposed scheme (M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 083901-(2004)) based upon the band anticrossing mechanism, the structure proposed here has several important advantages, and in fact represents an optimal implementation of the general criterion:
(a) Only two resonators per unit cell are needed for the bandwidth to be compressed to absolute zero.
(b) The same system can be used for time-reversal. The slope of the band can change sign as one modulates the resonant frequencies, which results in a time-reversal operation on the pulse.
(c) This system can operate with fast modulation rates while maintaining adiabaticity, which enables the use of the shortest waveguide. The total length of the waveguide L is determined by the initial bandwidth of the pulse, which sets the maximum speed in the waveguide vg0, and by the duration of the modulation τmod, which sets the distance that the pulse travels before it is stopped (i.e. L˜vg0τpulse+vg0τmod, where τpulse is the length of the pulse). Due to the delay-bandwidth product, vg0τpulse is a constant independent of the signal bandwidth δω, and the length of the system can thus be estimated as L˜(10+δωτmod)l. In this system, the gaps surrounding the middle band have sizes that are on the order of the cavity-waveguide coupling rate 1/τ, and are approximately independent of the slope of the middle band (
(d) This system can compress the largest possible pulse bandwidth for a given refractive index modulation strength δn. For a resonance with frequency ω, the largest frequency shift possible for a given index modulation is about ωδn/n. Therefore the largest compressible system bandwidth is approximately (M. F. Yanik, S. Fan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 083901 (2004)):
δω=ωδn/n (6)
which sets the largest bandwidth of a pulse that can be stopped. The introduced system can achieve this optimal utilization of the system bandwidth. The dispersion over most of the bandwidth is small compared with typical CROW band due to existence of long-range through-waveguide coupling between the cavities. Such reduction in dispersion is particularly prominent when the bandwidth is smaller than 1/τ. In the band-structure of
The all-optical system represents dramatic improvement over the atomic/electronic schemes for stopping light. For a small refractive index shift of δn/n=10−4 achievable in practical optoelectronic devices (S. L. Chuang, Physics of Optoelectronic Devices (Interscience, New York, 1995)), and assuming a carrier frequency of approximately 200 THz, as used in optical communications, the achievable bandwidths are on the order of 20 GHz, which is comparable to the bandwidth of a single wavelength channel in high-speed optical systems. In comparison, the atomic stop-light schemes have experimentally demonstrated bandwidths less than 100 kHz. See C. Liu, Z. Dutton, C. H. Behroozi, L. V. Hau, Nature 409, 490 (2001); D. F. Phillips, A. Fleischhauer, A. Mair, R. L. Walsworth, M. D. Lukin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 783 (2001); A. V. Turukhin et. al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 236021 (2002); and M. S. Bigelow, N. N. Lepeshkin, R. W. Boyd, Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 113903 (2003). The all-optical storage times are limited only by the cavity lifetimes, which are approaching millisecond time scales. See D. W. Vernooy, V. S. Ilchenko, H. Mabuchi, E. W. Streed, H. J. Kimble, Opt. Lett. 23, 247 (1998); and K. Vahala, Optical Microcavities, (World Scientific Pub., New Jersey, 2004). The on-chip and room temperature operation of all-optical schemes may thus enable completely new classical and quantum information processing capabilities.
While the invention has been described above by reference to various embodiments, it will be understood that changes and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the invention, which is to be defined only by the appended claims and their equivalent. For example, while the invention is illustrated by rods in air, the invention can also be implemented by means of a periodic arrangement of holes in a photonic crystal such as a dielectric material where defects for forming the cavities as well as waveguide comprise holes in the material of sizes different from those in the arrangement, and may contain a material different from that in the holes in the arrangement. All references referred to herein are incorporated by reference in their entireties.
This invention was supported in part by a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant NSF-NRAC, grant number ECS-0200445. The United States Government has rights in this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20030231826 | Boyd et al. | Dec 2003 | A1 |
20050248823 | Maleki et al. | Nov 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060115211 A1 | Jun 2006 | US |