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Tailored Complex Potentials and Friedel`s Law in Atom Optics
Tailored Complex Potentials and Friedel`s Law in Atom Optics

... state. A standing light wave creates a periodic potential for atomic de Broglie waves—a crystal made of light. By scanning the light frequency it is possible to vary between an effectively real sjDj ¿ gd and an imaginary sD ­ 0d periodic potential. A significant advantage of crystals of light is tha ...
G040254-00 - DCC
G040254-00 - DCC

... • 1 cm long arm cavitites, 0.15 mm laser spot size • Consistent with ~ 4 10-4 coating loss angle ...
Single Longitudinal Mode Blue-Violet Laser Diode for Data Storage
Single Longitudinal Mode Blue-Violet Laser Diode for Data Storage

... coherent interference, such as holographic e.g., will benefit from having a compact blue-violet laser diode source with a long coherence length and some level of wavelength tuning. Prior approaches, such as external cavities with diffraction gratings [1], have been used to generate single longitudin ...
Lasers-An Overview
Lasers-An Overview

...  Chemical : Some lasers require hazardous or toxic substances to operate (i.e., chemical dye, Excimer lasers).  Electrical : Most lasers utilize high voltages that can be lethal.  Fire : Solvents used in dye lasers are flammable. High voltage pulse or flash lamps may cause ignition. ...
Nonlinear Behavior and Damage of Dispersive Multilayer
Nonlinear Behavior and Damage of Dispersive Multilayer

... (focusing mirror 4, focal length f= 2m), we are able gradually very incident intensity and multiply the irradiance by order of magnitude. The investigated mirror is slided along the focusing beam while the spectrally and temporally averaged power is being measured with pyroelectric power head. Thus ...
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Document

... Since the diffuse and specular reflections depend on light sources, there is a separate contribution for each light source. OpenGL provides up to 8 light sources. Furthermore, there is a separate color component for each type of light. ...
Optical Properties of Solids
Optical Properties of Solids

... in free space. This reduction of the velocity leads to the bending of light rays at interfaces desclibed by Snell's law of refraction. Refraction, in itself, does not affect the intensity of the light wave as it propagates. Absorption occurs during the propagation if the frequency of the light is re ...
Unit 1.6 Optical Switching - DIT School of Electronics and
Unit 1.6 Optical Switching - DIT School of Electronics and

... Optical spectral monitoring receives a small optically tapped portion of the aggregated WDM signal, separates the tapped signal into its individual wavelengths, and monitors each channel’s optical spectra for wavelength accuracy, optical power levels, and optical crosstalk. OSM usually wraps softwar ...
Predicting the Appearance of Materials Using Lorenz
Predicting the Appearance of Materials Using Lorenz

ACOUSTO-OPTICS
ACOUSTO-OPTICS

... where cp is a fixed phase; we determine the reflected light from this inhomogeneous (graded-index) medium and track its slow variation with time by taking
IOSR Journal of Electronics and Communication Engineering (IOSR-JECE)
IOSR Journal of Electronics and Communication Engineering (IOSR-JECE)

... Performance analysis of 40 Gb/s PDM-DQPSK optical label switching system with frequency swept.. as the transmission fiber for each setup. For this part, chromatic dispersion (CD), polarization mode dispersion (PMD) and loss of SSMF are 0.16 ps/nm/km, 0.2 ps/km1/2 and 0.2 dB/km, respectively, while ...
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy of aqueous solutions using
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy of aqueous solutions using

... In standard FT-JR instruments, the measured signal has a large dynamic range caused by the broad spectrum of the source and the basic working principle of the instrument (which is the measurement of intensity as a function of pathlength difference in the two arms of a Michelson interferometer) . As ...
Inexpensive optical tweezers for undergraduate laboratories
Inexpensive optical tweezers for undergraduate laboratories

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... where ωj is the resonance frequency and B j is the oscillator strength. Here n stands for n1 or n2, depending on whether the dispersive properties of the core or the cladding are considered. In the case of optical fibers, the parameters Bj and ωj are obtained empirically by fitting the measured dis ...
Single-Mode Photonic Band Gap Guidance of Light in Air
Single-Mode Photonic Band Gap Guidance of Light in Air

... those in Figs. 2 and 3 and with air-filling fractions in a range from just more than 30% to almost 50%. Theoretical modeling of these structures is difficult and slow because of the very large values for the normalized frequencies (see Fig. 4). Our initial computations of the band structure revealed ...
Absorption of low-loss optical materials measured at 1064 nm by a
Absorption of low-loss optical materials measured at 1064 nm by a

... signal offset in the figure was induced by some light coming from the pump laser. We calculated that this offset was created by 2 nW of Nd:YAG radiation striking one quadrant of the detector 共of a total of 12 W incident upon the sample兲. To evaluate signal amplitude, we first measure our 100-ppm兾cm ...
Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2003 Beta - poster#2
Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2003 Beta - poster#2

... (ca 7 nm for a 20-mer), and a fluorochrome molecule. The physical dimensions of the fluorochrome we use, Alexa 532, have not been determined but are likely to be on the order of several nm in diameter (Molecular Probes, Inc.). The practical upper limit to probe length is determined by the penetratio ...
Influence of a thin metal layer on a beam propagation in
Influence of a thin metal layer on a beam propagation in

... As it can be noticed in Table 4 in most cases MFD decreases when thickness of a layer and a diameter of the structure increase. In all cases the MFD is insignificantly smaller than the MFD value of a non−deposited structure what is corrected with the theoretical meaning [15,19], an additional layer ...
244065
244065

... The interaction of photons with metallic nanoparticles and nanoantennas is important to a number of emerging nanotechnology applications due to the large enhancement and tight localization of electromagnetic fields in the vicinity of nanoparticles and nanoantennas. This interaction has potential app ...
Diffraction effects in optical interferometric displacement detection in nanoelectromechanical systems
Diffraction effects in optical interferometric displacement detection in nanoelectromechanical systems

... clamped beam and the optical spot is displayed in Fig. 1(c). First, we studied the properties of optical cavities in NEMS with emphasis on their use in displacement detection. The optical cavity is formed between the top surface of the metallized nanomechanical beam and the substrate as shown in Fig ...
Integrated polymer micro-ring resonators for optical sensing
Integrated polymer micro-ring resonators for optical sensing

... Compared to our previous study of PMATRIFE / SU8 / PMATRIFE MR, we used the structure without PMATRIFE upper cladding layer which has been replaced by air or water superstrates for sensor applications. Nevertheless, we have used the same photolithography mask, the design of which is reminded hereaft ...
Experimental demonstration of near-infrared
Experimental demonstration of near-infrared

... coated waveguides at the cutoff frequency [17, 21], arrays of silver or gold nanowires grown in porous alumina templates [22, 23], and metal-dielectric multilayer structures [24–26]. Multilayer metamaterials have been explored to realize extraordinary optical functionalities such as negative refract ...
PDF Links - Electronic Materials Letters
PDF Links - Electronic Materials Letters

Photo-catalytic transparent heat mirror film TiO2/TiN/TiO2
Photo-catalytic transparent heat mirror film TiO2/TiN/TiO2

... TiO2 films were formed by direct current magnetron sputtering of a water-cooled metallic Ti target (99.6% purity) in a mixture of pure Argon (99.999%) and O2 (99.999%) gas with a ratio of O2/Ar = 0.08. The TiN films in heat mirrors(TiO2/TiN/TiO2) were deposited by direct current magnetron sputtering ...
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Ellipsometry

Ellipsometry is an optical technique for investigating the dielectric properties (complex refractive index or dielectric function) of thin films. Ellipsometry can be used to characterize composition, roughness, thickness (depth), crystalline nature, doping concentration, electrical conductivity and other material properties. It is very sensitive to the change in the optical response of incident radiation that interacts with the material being investigated.Typically, the measured signal is the change in polarization as the incident radiation (in a known state) interacts with the material structure of interest (reflected, absorbed, scattered, or transmitted). The polarization change is quantified by the amplitude ratio, Ψ, and the phase difference, Δ (defined below). Because the signal depends on the thickness as well as the materials properties, ellipsometry can be a universal tool for contact free determination of thickness and optical constants of films of all kinds.This technique has found applications in many different fields, from semiconductor physics to microelectronics and biology, from basic research to industrial applications. Ellipsometry is a very sensitive measurement technique and provides unequaled capabilities for thin film metrology. As an optical technique, spectroscopic ellipsometry is non-destructive and contactless. Because the incident radiation can be focused, small sample sizes can be imaged and desired characteristics can be mapped over a larger area (m^2).The one weakness of ellipsometry is the need to model the data. Entire courses are taught in the modeling of the raw data. Models can be physically based on energy transitions or simply free parameters used to fit the data.Upon the analysis of the change of polarization of light, ellipsometry can yield information about layers that are thinner than the wavelength of the probing light itself, even down to a single atomic layer. Ellipsometry can probe the complex refractive index or dielectric function tensor, which gives access to fundamental physical parameters like those listed above. It is commonly used to characterize film thickness for single layers or complex multilayer stacks ranging from a few angstroms or tenths of a nanometer to several micrometers with an excellent accuracy.The name ""ellipsometry"" stems from the fact that Elliptical polarization of light is used. The term ""spectroscopic"" relates to the fact that the information gained is a function of the light's wavelength or energy (spectra). The technique has been known at least since 1888 by the work of Paul Drude, (the term ""ellipsometry"" being first used probably in 1945 ) and has many applications today. A spectroscopic ellipsometer can be found in most thin film analytical labs. Ellipsometry is also becoming more interesting to researchers in other disciplines such as biology and medicine. These areas pose new challenges to the technique, such as measurements on unstable liquid surfaces and microscopic imaging.
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