Standing Waves, Beats, and Group Velocity
Standing Waves, Beats, and Group Velocity
Group-velocity dispersion
Superposition allows waves to pass
through each other.
Otherwise they'd get tacked up
while overlapping.
Now well add waves with different
complex exponentials.
It's easy to add waves with the same complex exponentials:
where all initial phases are lumped into E1, E2, and E3.
Note
the plus
But sometimes the complex exponentials will be different. sign!
For such cases, well have to add the terms the old-fashioned way.
Adding waves of the same frequency, but
opposite direction, yields a standing wave.
Waves propagating in opposite directionscounter-propagating waves:
Standing waves occur inside lasers, where beams bounce back and
forth.
l
A Standing Wave
Nodes
The points where
the amplitude is
always zero are
called nodes. E
The points where
the amplitude
oscillates
maximally are z
called anti-
nodes.
Note that the
nodes and anti-
nodes are each
separated by l/2.
Anti-nodes
A Standing Wave: Experiment
3.9 GHz microwaves
Mirror
Input beam
Reflected beam
Note the node at the mirror at left, where there is a boundary condition
that the electric field = 0.
Mirror Mirror
Standing Waves in a Laser
A laser has two mirrors, each with the
same boundary condition: E = 0. z
not cos(kz) 0 L
The left mirror means using sin(kz):
m
E ( z, t ) 2 E0 sin(kz )cos(t )
kmL = mp or (2p/lm)L = mp
m(lm/2) = L or lm = 2L/m
k2
Pulsed Waves Crossing at an Angle
Big angle: small fringes.
Small angle: big fringes.
The fringe spacing, L: L
Large angle:
L l / (2sin )
2
As the angle decreases to
zero, the fringes become
larger and larger, until finally,
at = 0, the intensity pattern
becomes constant.
Small angle:
L
L = 0.1 mm is about the minimum
fringe spacing you can see: 2
sin l / (2L)
0.5m / 200m 1/ 400 rad 0.15
very small!
Two Point Sources Emitting Spherical
or Circular Waves
The farther apart the sources, the smaller the node spacing in angle.
When two cosines (or sines) of different
frequency combine, the result is beats.
E(t ) E0 exp(i1t ) E0 exp(i2t )
1 2 1 2 1 ave
Let: ave and
2 2 2 ave
Sum
Envel- 2p/
ope
Inten-
sity
time
When two light waves of different frequency
interfere, they also produce beats.
E( z, t ) E0 exp i(k1 z 1t ) E0 exp i(k2 z 2t )
k1 k2 k1 k2
Let: kave and k
2 2
2
and: ave 1 and 1 2
2 2
So:
E( z, t ) E0 exp i(kave z kz avet t ) E0 exp i(kave z kz avet t )
Sum
Envel-
ope
Inten-
sity
z
Its usually very difficult to see optical
Seeing Beats: beats because they occur on a time
Pulses scale thats too fast to detect.
This is why we said earlier that beams of
However, a sum of different colors dont interfere, and we
many frequencies will only see the average intensity.
yield a train of well-
separated pulses: Call the resulting pulse shape APulse.
The phase velocity comes from the rapidly varying part: v = ave / kave
E (t ) I Pulse ( z v g t ) exp[ik ( z v t )]
Group velocity is not equal to phase velocity
if the medium is dispersive (i.e., n varies).
Evaluate the group velocity for the two-frequency case:
c0 k1 c0 k2
vg
k n1k1 n2 k2
c0 k1 k2 c0
If n1 n2 n, vg v phase velocity
n k1 k2 n
If n1 n2 , v g v c0 / n
Phase and Group The phase velocity, v, is that of the
high-frequency oscillations. The group
Velocities velocity, vg, is that of the pulse envelope.
In vacuum Unrealistic
Most
common Possible
case
Unrealistic
Rare
Calculating the Group Velocity, vg d /dk
Now, is the same in or out of the medium, but k = k0 n, where k0 is
the k-vector in vacuum, and n depends on the medium.
So it's easier to think of as the independent variable:
v g 1/ dk / d using the
product rule
So:
dn c0 dn
v g c0 / n / 1
d n n d
dn
Recalling that: v g c0 / n
d
2c0 dn l02
we have: v g c0 / n
l0 d l0 2c0
dn c0 l0 dn
v g c0 / n l0 / 1
d l0
n n d l0
Can vg > v or even c0 in absorbing regions?
For normal dispersion, dn/d is positive. vg = c0 / (n + dn/d)
So vg < v for these frequencies.
where dispersion is
anomalous (near a
Normal Normal Normal
dispersion dispersion dispersion resonance).
1
So vg can exceed
0 1 2 3
v or even c0 for
Infrared Visible Ultraviolet X-ray
these frequencies!
2
Slow Light (vg << c0) and Stopped Light
Fabricating a material with
extremely high, positive dn/d
yields a very slow light speed.
Refractive index, n
Phase-fronts Pulse-
front tilt
Pulse Prism
Phase-fronts
Pulse-front
A chirped pulse
Short Not so
pulse short
pulse
Many km of fiber
Pulse-front tilt
Pulse Prism
Its routine to stretch and then compress short light pulses by factors
of >1000.
Adjusting the prism maintains alignment.
Any prism in the compressor can be translated perpendicular to the
beam path to add glass and reduce the magnitude of negative GVD.