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Equilibrium mode distribution

About: Equilibrium mode distribution is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 928 publications have been published within this topic receiving 14939 citations.


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Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Sep 1996
TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of mode coupling and interference effects on the mode structure of CO2, waveguide and slab laser generation both for large scale empty waveguide resonator with flat and curved mirrors and when properties of active medium are counted has been investigated.
Abstract: Influence of mode coupling and interference effects on the mode structure of CO2, waveguide and slab laser generation both for large scale empty waveguide resonator with flat and curved mirrors and when properties of active medium are counted has been investigated.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a nonlinear dynamic in multimode optical fiber where intermodal four-wave mixing (IM-FWM) and Kerr-induced nonlinear mode coupling (NLC) are strongly interacting was studied.
Abstract: In this paper we study, both experimentally and by theory, a new nonlinear dynamic in multimode optical fiber where intermodal four-wave mixing (IM-FWM) and Kerr-induced nonlinear mode coupling (NLC) are strongly interacting. We show that presence of phase-matched IM-FWM and strong nonlinear mode coupling results in an unprecedented saturable mode conversion in the FWM anti-Stokes beam. We investigate the evolution of modal conversion as a function of fiber length and show that the result of this novel nonlinear dynamic is a controllable, length independent mode conversion. Our theoretical calculations suggest that the converted anti-Stokes beam can also be amplified via IM-FWM. We observe a mode conversion with an efficiency as high as 90 percent.
01 Jan 2006
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a technique for measuring the magnitude of leakage channels that cause light not coupled into the fundamental mode to propagate through the fiber cladding and by means of a leaky mode.
Abstract: Spatial filtering is necessary to achieve deep nulls in optical interferometer and single mode infrared fibers can serve as spatial filters. The filtering function is based on the ability of these devices to perform the mode-cleaning function: only the component of the input field that is coupled to the single bound (fundamental) mode of the device propagates to the output without substantial loss. In practical fiber devices, there are leakage channels that cause light not coupled into the fundamental mode to propagate to the output. These include propagation through the fiber cladding and by means of a leaky mode. We propose a technique for measuring the magnitude of this leakage and apply it to infrared fibers made at the Naval Research Laboratory and at Tel Aviv University. In froduction Direct observation of Earth-like extrasolar planets with regular telescopes is impeded by the bright star, whose light overwhelms the faint image of a planet orbiting around it. The use of interferometers for planet finding relies on suppressing the star light by combining beams from two telescopes out of phase. One of the impediments to this technique is the existence of wavefront errors in the telescopes - the wavefronts originating from the two telescope mirrors may not have the exact same shape, so the difference between the wavefronts will cause residual signal at the null. Spatial filters can help achieve deep nulls by equalizing the wavefronts. The use of single mode optical fibers for spatial filtering has been discussed previously1. A stepindex fiber consists of a high index cylindrical core and low index cylindrical cladding that encloses the core. Single mode fibers have only a single bound mode, therefore only the component of the input field that couples into this fundamental mode of the fiber will propagate to the output without loss. An ideal modal filter would have only this component of the input field reaching the output. However, in practical devices, other components of the input field may also appear at the output. (1) Some components of the input field can couple into leaky modes which carry the energy to the output with little loss. Leaky modes were considered in detail by Snyder and ~ove~ and Sammut and snyder3. (2) The energy can also be carried through the cladding of the fiber. The cladding itself acts as a light pipe that very effectively captures the light not coupled into the bound or leaky modes, as well as the light radiated from the core by leaky modes. Typically, the outside of the cladding is covered with light-absorbing material to reduce light propagation through the cladding. Previously, the following techniques have been used to ascertain the single mode operation of the fiber. One method is to construct an interferometer and measure its null depth with and without the mode-filtering fiber. This provides confirmation of single
Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2016
TL;DR: In this article, a metal screen with a 1D array of holes inside a parallel-plate waveguide (PPWG) operating at terahertz (THz) frequencies was used to study the dependence of extraordinary optical transmission (EOT) on the input excitation mode.
Abstract: We study the dependence of extraordinary optical transmission (EOT) on the input excitation mode by placing a metal screen with a 1D array of holes inside a parallel-plate waveguide (PPWG) operating at terahertz (THz) frequencies. We demonstrate that the output resonant frequency depends strongly on the input mode of the waveguide. We show that the surface plasmon theoretical description is invalid in the case of TE 1 mode excitation, and instead use mode matching to properly predict the resonances in both TE 1 and TEM. Through this disparity of outcomes between the two different waveguide excitation modes, we can better understand the resonant transmission process.
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of a dispersion of the linear mode coupling coefficient of an optical waveguide (OWG) with Kerr nonlinearity on the dispersion parameters and dynamics of the optical pulse propagating in such a system is studied.
Abstract: The influence of a dispersion of the linear mode coupling coefficient of an optical waveguide (OWG) with Kerr nonlinearity on the dispersion parameters and dynamics of an optical pulse propagating in such a system is studied. In OWGs with a strong linear mode coupling, the presence of a dispersion of the mode coupling may lead to a significant decrease in the energy threshold for nonlinear self-compression of pulses as compared to the case of a single-mode OWG.

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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20235
202212
20218
20205
20191
20183