Lecture 1, Part 2
Lecture 1, Part 2
Lecture 1, Part 2
c t t
❑ Linear approximation:
- P and E is supposed to have a connection: 0 r E = 0 E + P
P = 0 r ( ) − 1 E = 0 (1) ( )E
(1) ( ) = r ( ) − 1 = nˆ 2 ( ) − 1
Nonlinear responce of a medium
❑ In general, P is a nonlinear function of E:
(
P (t ) = 0 (1) E(t ) + (2) E(t ) 2 + (3) E(t )3 + )
❑ In a component form:
(
Pi = 0 ij(1) E j + ijk
( 2)
E j Ek + ijkl
( 3)
E j Ek El + )
- (n) describes (n)th order nonlinearity
- (n) and P(n) prescribe (n)th order (nonlinear) optical phenomena:
Pi (2) = 0 ijk
(2)
E j Ek 2nd order nonlinear polarization
Pi (3) = 0 ijkl
(3)
E j Ek El 3th order nonlinear polarization
Nonlinear response
In a nonresonant case:
( n+1) 1 Eat is electric field by which the atom
n = 1, 2,3,... binds valence electrons:
(n) Eat
Eat 1010 Vm −1 1012 Vm −1
In condensed matter (1)
1 so
Similarly
Thus, mainly the lowest nonlinearities (2nd and 3rd) are significant.
for nonlinearities high intensity light sources are needed (pulsed) lasers
ijk
(2)
= S i S j S k
(2)
, ,
In particular, if S is an inversion transform, then
0, i
S i = − i =
−1, = i
ijk = ( − i )( − j )(− k ) = − ijk =0 !!
(2) (2) (2)
, ,
The symmetry of (n)
r→-r (r=xi+yj+zk)
is always (2) = 0 !
in isotropic (bulk) media (many solids and all liquids and gases)
only 3th order (and other odd-order 5th, 7th , …) nonlinearities can
be detected
Potential nonlinear optical effects
Nonlinear optics is what happens when the polarization is the result
of higher-order (nonlinear!) terms in the field:
2 = 2nd harmonic!
So:
+ 2 E1 + 2 E2
2 2
dc rectification
Note also that, when i is negative inside the exp, the E in front has a *.
Complicated nonlinear-optical effects can occur
Nonlinear-optical processes
are often referred to as:
"N-wave-mixing processes"
The more photons (i.e., the higher the order) the weaker the effect,
however. Very-high-order effects can be seen, but they require
very high irradiance.
Conservation laws for photons in nonlinear optics
1 + 2 + 3 − 4 + 5 = sig
k 1 + k 2 + k 3 − k 4 + k 5 = k sig
Energy
1 + 1 = sig sig = 21
1
n( ) = n(2 )
Frequency
2
First Demonstration of Second-Harmonic Generation
Note that the very weak spot due to the second harmonic is missing.
It was removed by an overzealous Physical Review Letters editor,
who thought it was a speck of dirt.
Phase-matching in SHG using birefringence
Birefringent materials have different refractive indices for different
polarizations. “Ordinary” and “Extraordinary” refractive indices can
be different by up to 0.1 for SHG crystals.
Refractive index
then be satisfied.
ne
Use the extraordinary polarization
for and the ordinary for 2: no
ne () = no (2)
Frequency 2
Far from
phase-matching: SHG crystal
Output beam
Input beam
Closer to
phase-matching: SHG crystal
Output beam
Input beam
1 1
2 = 3 − 1 "signal"
3
3 2
"idler"
1 1 1
3
3 2 2
mirror mirror
Optical Parametric Optical Parametric
Amplification (OPA) Oscillation (OPO)
DFG example: THz-wave generation
Pi ( 2 ) ( = − ' ) = 0 ijk
( 2)
E j ( ) Ek* ( ' )
V Polarizer
If V = 0, the pulse
polarization doesn’t
change.
“Pockels cell”
If V = Vp , the pulse
(voltage may be
transverse or polarization switches to its
longitudinal) orthogonal state.
VIS SFG
IR
Sum Frequency Generation (SFG)
• Basic principle:
1
= 1 + 2
2
Pi (2) ( ) = ijk
(2)
E j (1 ) Ek (2 )
(2) 2 (2) 2
ISFG Pi eff I I
1 2
• Note: (2)
ijk =0 in media with inversion symmetry !
SFG from a surface
• at surface (~ a monolayer) the symmetry is always broken SFG
1
2
SFG
(2)=0
(2)=0
(2)=0
(2)=0 v=1
v=0
Third-order nonlinearities:
Four-wave mixing
Third-harmonic
generation
Induced
gratings
Phase
conjugation
Nonlinear
refractive index
Self-focusing
Self-phase
modulation
Continuum
generation
Third-harmonic THG Medium
generation (THG) 3
+ other terms
Third-harmonic generation is weaker than second-harmonic and
sum-frequency generation, so the third harmonic is usually
generated using SHG followed by SFG, rather than by direct THG.
Noncollinear THG
We can also allow two different input beams, whose frequencies can
be different.
So in addition to generating the third harmonic of each input beam,
the medium will generate interesting sum frequencies.
THG Signal #1
medium
+
+
Signal #2
Signal #1
−
Nonlinear
medium 2k1 − k 2
−
Signal #2 2k2 − k1
= − +
k pol = k1 − k2 + k3
P (3) ( ) = 0 (3) ( = − + ) E1 ( ) E2* ( ) E3 ( )
Substituting the polarization into the wave equation (assuming slow
variation in the envelope of E compared to 1/):
2 E 1 2 E 2
E
− = +
(1) (3) 2
E
z 2 c02 t 2
0 0
t 2
1 + (1) + (3) E 2 2
E
2
E = 0
− since 0 0 = 1/ c02
z 2 c02 t 2
n = 1+ +
(1) (3) 2
So the refractive index is: E
Nonlinear Refractive Index
The refractive index in the presence of linear and nonlinear
polarization:
n = 1 + (1) + (3) E
2
Now, the usual refractive index (which we’ll call n0) is: n0 = 1 + (1)
n = n + = n0 1 +
2 (3) 2 (3) 2
So: 0 E E / n02
I E
2
n n0 + n2 I since
The nonlinear refractive index magnitude and
response time
A variety of effects give rise to a nonlinear refractive index.
Those that yield a large n2 typically have a slow response.
If the beam has a spatial Gaussian intensity profile, then any nonlinear
medium will have a spatial refractive index profile that is also Gaussian:
2 2
n = n0 + n2 I 0 exp(−2r / w0 )
2 2
Near beam center: n0 + n2 I0 (1 − 2r /w0 )
(r ) = n k0 L n0 k0 L + n2 k0 L I 0 (1 − 2r 2 / w02 )
(r ) constant − 2n2 k0 L I 0 (r 2 / w02 )
This is precisely the behavior of a lens!
But one whose focal power scales with the intensity.
Whole-beam self-focusing
Small-scale self-focusing
If the beam has variations in intensity across its profile, it undergoes
small-scale self-focusing.
Intensity
Each tiny bump in the beam undergoes
its own separate self-focusing,
yielding a tightly focused spot inside
the beam, called a “filament.”
Position
And they grow from quantum noise in the beam, which is always there.
exp ikz
Distorting exp ikz − i ( x, y )
medium
( x, y )
A normal mirror leaves
the sign of the phase
unchanged
A phase-conjugate
mirror reverses the
sign of the phase
A flat phase vs. time yields the narrowest spectrum. If we assume the pulse
starts with a flat phase, then SPM broadens the spectrum.
This is not a small effect! A total phase variation of hundreds can occur! A broad
spectrum generated in this manner is called a continuum.
Experimental Continuum
spectrum in a fiber
Continua created by Low
propagating 500-fs 625- Energy
nm pulses through 30 cm
of single-mode fiber.
Medium
Energy
Broadest spectrum
occurs for highest
energy
supercontinuum High
Energy
UV Continuum in Air!
308 nm input pulse; weak focusing with a 1-m lens.
The Supercontinuum
Laser Source
The continuum from
microstructure optical
fiber is ultrabroadband