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7' Nonlinear Optics

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Comparing E0 and its time derivatives: And we'll do the same for the polarization: ... derivative of the polarization envelope (it's small compared to the w02P0 term) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 7' Nonlinear Optics


1
7. Nonlinear Optics
Why do nonlinear-optical effects
occur? Maxwell's equations in a
medium Nonlinear-optical media Second-harmonic
generation Sum- and difference-frequency
generation Higher-order nonlinear optics The
Slowly Varying Envelope Approximation Phase-match
ing and Conservation laws for photons
2
Nonlinear optics isnt something you see everyday.
Sending infrared light into a crystal yielded
this display of green light (second-harmonic
generation) Nonlinear optics allows us to
change the color of a light beam, to change its
shape in space and time, and to create ultrashort
laser pulses. Why don't we see nonlinear
optical effects in our daily life? 1.
Intensities of daily life are too weak. 2. Normal
light sources are incoherent. 3. The occasional
crystal we see has the wrong symmetry (for
SHG). 4. Phase-matching is required, and it
doesn't usually happen on its own.
3
Why do nonlinear-optical effects occur?
  • Recall that, in normal linear optics, a light
    wave acts on a molecule,
  • which vibrates and then emits its own light wave
    that interferes
  • with the original light wave.

We can also imagine this process in terms of the
molecular energy levels, using arrows for
the photon energies
4
Why do nonlinear-optical effects occur?
(continued)
  • Now, suppose the irradiance is high enough that
    many molecules are excited to the higher-energy
    state. This state can then act as the lower
    level for additional excitation. This yields
    vibrations at all frequencies corresponding to
    all energy differences between populated states.

5
Nonlinear optics is analogous to nonlinear
electronics, which we can observe easily.
Sending a high-volume sine-wave (pure
frequency) signal into cheap speakers yields a
truncated output signal, more of a square wave
than a sine. This square wave has higher
frequencies.
We hear this as distortion.
6
Nonlinear optics and anharmonic oscillators
Another way to look at nonlinear optics is that
the potential of the electron or nucleus (in a
molecule) is not a simple harmonic
potential. Example vibrational motion
For weak fields, motion is harmonic, and linear
optics prevails. For strong fields (i.e.,
lasers), anharmonic motion occurs, and
higher harmonics occur, both in the motion and
the light emission.
7
Maxwell's Equations in a Medium
  • The induced polarization, P, contains the effect
    of the medium

These equations reduce to the (scalar) wave
equation
Inhomogeneous Wave Equation
Sine waves of all frequencies are solutions to
the wave equation its the polarization that
tells which frequencies will occur. The
polarization is the driving term for the solution
to this equation.
8
Solving the wave equation in the presence of
linear induced polarization
For low irradiances, the polarization is
proportional to the incident field
In this simple (and most common) case, the wave
equation becomes
Using the fact that
Simplifying
This equation has the solution
where w c k and c c0 /n and
n (1c)1/2

The induced polarization only changes the
refractive index. Dull. If only the
polarization contained other frequencies
9
Maxwell's Equations in a Nonlinear Medium
  • Nonlinear optics is what happens when the
    polarization is the result
  • of higher-order (nonlinear!) terms in the field
  • What are the effects of such nonlinear terms?
    Consider the second-order term
  • 2w 2nd harmonic!
  • Harmonic generation is one of many exotic effects
    that can arise!

10
Sum- and difference-frequency generation
  • Suppose there are two different-color beams
    present
  • So

2nd-harmonic gen 2nd-harmonic gen Sum-freq
gen Diff-freq gen dc rectification
11
Complicated nonlinear-optical effects can occur.
Nonlinear-optical processes are often referred to
as "N-wave-mixing processes" where N is the
number of photons involved (including the emitted
one).
Emitted-light frequency
  • 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. Also, if the photon energies
    coincide with the mediums energy levels as above
    the effect will be stronger.

12
Induced polarization for nonlinear optical effects
  • Arrows pointing upward correspond to
  • absorbed photons and contribute a factor
  • of their field, Ei arrows pointing downward
  • correspond to emitted photons and contri-
  • bute a factor the complex conjugate of
  • their field

13
Solving the wave equation in nonlinear optics
Recall the inhomogeneous wave equation
Take into account the linear polarization by
replacing c0 with c.
Because its second-order in both space and time,
and P is a nonlinear function of E , we cant
easily solve this equation. Indeed, nonlinear
differential equations are really hard. Well
have to make approximations
14
Separation-of-frequencies approximation
The total E-field will contain several nearly
discrete frequencies, w1, w2, etc. So well
write separate wave equations for each frequency,
considering only the induced polarization at the
given frequency
where E1 and P1 are the E-field and polarization
at frequency w1.
where E2 and P2 are the E-field and polarization
at frequency w2.
etc.
This will be a reasonable approximation even for
relatively broadband ultrashort pulses
15
The non-depletion assumption
  • Well also assume that the nonlinear-optical
    effect is weak, so we can assume that the fields
    at the input frequencies wont change much. This
    assumption is called non-depletion.
  • As a result, we need only consider the wave
    equation for the field and polarization
    oscillating at the new signal frequency, w0.

where E0 and P0 are the E-field and polarization
at frequency w0.
16
The Slowly Varying Envelope Approximation (SVEA)
Well write the pulse E-field as a product of an
envelope and complex exponential
E0(z,t) E0 (z,t)
expi(w0 t k0 z) We'll assume that the new
pulse envelope wont change too rapidly. This
is the Slowly Varying Amplitude
Approximation. If d is the length scale for
variation of the envelope, SVEA says d gtgt l
Comparing E0 and its derivatives
17
The Slowly Varying Envelope Approximation
(continued)
Well do the same in time If t is the time
scale for variation of the envelope, SVEA says
t gtgt T0 where T0 is one optical period, 2p/w0.
Comparing E0 and its time derivatives
18
The Slowly Varying Envelope Approximation
(continued)
And well do the same for the polarization
P (z,t)
P0 (z,t) expi(w0 t k0 z) If t is the time
scale for variation of the envelope, SVEA says
t gtgt T0 where T0 is one optical period, 2p/w0.
Comparing P0 and its time derivatives
19
The Slowly Varying Envelope Approximation
(continued)
Computing the derivatives
x
Neglect all 2nd derivatives of envelopes with
respect to z and t. Also, neglect the 1st
derivative of the polarization envelope (its
small compared to the w02P0 term). We must keep
E0s first derivatives, as well see in the next
slide
20
The Slowly Varying Envelope Approximation
Substituting the remaining derivatives into the
inhomogeneous wave equation for the signal field
at w0
Now, because k0 w0 / c, the last two bracketed
terms cancel. And we can cancel the complex
exponentials, leaving
Dividing by 2ik0
Slowly Varying Envelope Approximation
21
Including dispersion in the SVEA
We can include dispersion by Fourier-transforming,
expanding k(w) to first order in w, and
transforming back. This replaces c with vg
We can include GVD also expanding to 2nd order,
yielding
We can understand most nonlinear-optical effects
best by neglecting GVD, so we will, but this
extra term can become important for very very
short (i.e., very broadband) pulses.
22
Transforming to a moving co-ordinate system
Define a moving co-ordinate system zv
z tv t z / vg
Transforming the derivatives
The SVEA becomes
The time deriva- tives cancel!
Canceling terms, the SVEA becomes
Well drop the sub- script (v) to simplify our
equations.
23
Integrating the SVEA
Usually, P0 P0 (z,t), and even this simple
equation can be difficult to solve (integrate).
For now, well just assume that P0 is a constant,
and the integration becomes trivial
And the field amplitude grows linearly with
distance. The irradiance (intensity) then grows
quadratically with distance.
24
But the E-field and polarization k-vectors arent
necessarily equal.
We choose w0 to be the sum of the input
ws The k-vector of light at this
frequency is But the k-vector of the induced
polarization is Unfortunately, kp may not be
the same as k0! So we cant necessarily cancel
the exp(-ikz)s
25
Phase-Matching
That kp may not be the same as k0 is the
all-important effect of phase-matching. It must
be considered in all nonlinear-optical problems.
If the ks dont match, the induced polarization
and the generated electric field will drift in
and out of phase.
The SVEA becomes
where
Integrating the SVEA in this case over the length
of the medium (L) yields
26
Phase-Matching (continued)
So
27
Sinusoidal Dependence of SHG Intensity on Length
Large Dk
Small Dk
Notice how the intensity is created as the beam
passes through the crystal, but, if Dk isnt
zero, newly created light is out of phase with
previously created light, causing cancellation.
28
The Ubiquitous Sinc2(DkL/2)
Recall that
Multiplying and dividing by L/2
Phase Mismatch almost always yields a sinc2(Dk L
/ 2) dependence.
29
More of the Ubiquitous Sinc2(DkL/2)
The field
The irradiance (intensity)
To maximize the irradiance, we must try to set Dk
0. This is phase-matching.
30
Phase-matching Conservation laws for photons in
nonlinear optics
  • Adding the frequencies
  • is the same as energy conservation if we multiply
    both sides by h-bar
  • Adding the ks conserves momentum
  • So phase-matching is equivalent to conservation
    of energy and momentum!
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