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Shinji Yamashita

Researcher at University of Tokyo

Publications -  380
Citations -  6717

Shinji Yamashita is an academic researcher from University of Tokyo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fiber laser & Laser. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 359 publications receiving 6082 citations. Previous affiliations of Shinji Yamashita include The Furukawa Electric Co., Ltd. & Fujitsu.

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Saturable absorbers incorporating carbon nanotubes directly synthesized onto substrates and fibers and their application to mode-locked fiber lasers

TL;DR: High-quality single-walled carbon nanotubes were directly synthesized on quartz substrates and fiber ends and successfully applied the SWNTs to mode lock a fiber laser producing subpicosecond pulses at a 50-MHz repetition rate.
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Multiwavelength erbium-doped fibre laser using intracavity etalon and cooled by liquid nitrogen

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported simultaneous oscillation of 17 0.8 nm spliced wavelengths from a Fabry-Perot (FP) erbium doped fiber laser.
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A Tutorial on Nonlinear Photonic Applications of Carbon Nanotube and Graphene

TL;DR: One and two dimensional forms of carbon, Carbon nanotube and graphene, have interesting and useful not only electronic but also photonic properties as discussed by the authors, and we refer the reader to the tutorial.
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Optical deposition of graphene and carbon nanotubes in a fiber ferrule for passive mode-locked lasing

TL;DR: Graphene, a one atom thick planar sheet of carbon atoms arranged into a hexagonal lattice, has been recently proposed as an alternative to CNTs in several photonics applications and a method for the integration of graphene into a fiber ferrule using an optical deposition technique is proposed.
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Carbon nanotube mode lockers with enhanced nonlinearity via evanescent field interaction in D-shaped fibers.

TL;DR: A novel passive mode-locking scheme for pulsed lasers enhanced by the interaction of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) with the evanescent field of propagating light in a D-shaped optical fiber that ensures the preservation of the original morphology of the individual CNTs.