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Simon Gross

Researcher at Macquarie University

Publications -  208
Citations -  3526

Simon Gross is an academic researcher from Macquarie University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laser & Interferometry. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 190 publications receiving 2950 citations. Previous affiliations of Simon Gross include National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Japan & Centre for Ultrahigh Bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems.

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Laser written circuits for quantum photonics

TL;DR: The femtosecond laser direct-writing of waveguide circuits in glasses is among the few integrated optical platforms to have produced individually every component required for scalable quantum computation.
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Mid-infrared Q-switched Er:YAG laser for medical applications

TL;DR: The 2.94 μm Er:YAG laser Q-switched mechanically by a rotating mirror was developed in this article, which can generate pulses of 30 mJ energy and duration below 290 ns, which corresponds to over 100 kW peak power.
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Low bend loss waveguides enable compact, efficient 3D photonic chips

TL;DR: This procedure was used to fabricate an efficient 3D, photonic device known as a "pupil-remapper" with negligible bend losses for the first time, and will also allow for complex chips, based on 10's - 100's of waveguides to be realized in a compact foot print with short fabrication times.
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Ultrafast-laser-inscribed 3D integrated photonics: challenges and emerging applications

TL;DR: In this paper, the basic techniques and technological challenges of 3D integrated photonics fabricated using ultrafast laser inscription are reviewed as well as the most recent progress in the fields of astrophotonics, optical communication, quantum photonics, emulation of quantum systems, optofluidics and sensing.
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Fifty percent internal slope efficiency femtosecond direct-written Tm 3+:ZBLAN waveguide laser

TL;DR: A 790 nm pumped, Tm³⁺ doped ZBLAN glass buried waveguide laser that produces 47 mW at 1880 nm, with a 50% internal slope efficiency and an M² of 1.7 is reported, which is the most efficient laser created in a glass host via femtosecond waveguide writing.