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Advanced Photonics 第2卷 第5期

Author Affiliations
Abstract
1 Shenzhen University, China
2 King’s College London, United Kingdom
Advanced Photonics Co-Editors-in-Chief Anatoly Zayats and Xiao-Cong (Larry) Yuan introduce the special issue celebrating 60 years of laser.
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 050101
Author Affiliations
Abstract
The Advanced Photonics special issue celebrating the 60-year laser anniversary is an ideal opportunity to review some highlights from its history, at the same time taking us on a tour of over a century of Nobel Prizes.
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 050501
Author Affiliations
Abstract
Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
The article is an interview with Shining Zhu of Nanjing Unversity, conducted by Guoqing Chang of the Chinese Academy of Sciences Insitute of Physics, on behalf of Advanced Photonics.
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 050502
Author Affiliations
Abstract
1 Nanjing University, College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, School of Physics, Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures, National Laboratory of Solid State Microstructures, Nanjing, China
2 University of Arkansas, Department of Physics, Fayetteville, Arkansas, United States
Semiconductor perovskite films are now being widely investigated as light harvesters in solar cells with ever-increasing power conversion efficiencies, which have motivated the fabrication of other optoelectronic devices, such as light-emitting diodes, lasers, and photodetectors. Their superior material and optical properties are shared by the counterpart colloidal nanocrystals (NCs), with the additional advantage of quantum confinement that can yield size-dependent optical emission ranging from the near-UV to near-infrared wavelengths. So far, intensive research efforts have been devoted to the optical characterization of perovskite NC ensembles, revealing not only fundamental exciton relaxation and recombination dynamics but also low-threshold amplified spontaneous emission and novel superfluorescence effects. Meanwhile, the application of single-particle spectroscopy techniques to perovskite NCs has helped to resolve a variety of optical properties for which there are few equivalents in traditional colloidal NCs, mainly including nonblinking photoluminescence, suppressed spectral diffusion, stable exciton fine structures, and coherent single-photon emission. While the main purpose of ensemble optical studies is to guide the smooth development of perovskite NCs in classical optoelectronic applications, the rich observations from single-particle optical studies mark the emergence of a potential platform that can be exploited for quantum information technologies.
perovskite nanocrystals optical studies single-particle spectroscopy transient absorption optoelectronic applications quantum information technologies 
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 054001
Author Affiliations
Abstract
A history and a glimpse into the future of spaser (acronym for “surface plasmon amplification by stimulated emission of radiation”) is provided. The spaser (also called a plasmonic nanolaser) is an active nanosystem including a gain medium and a nanoplasmonic metal core. It generates coherent intense nanolocalized fields. Theoretically predicted in 2003 by Bergman and Stockman, the spaser grew into a large fundamental research and application field with thousands of publications. We review a few of them to illustrate the most important and general fundamental properties of the spaser. We also review some selected applications of spasers, in particular, to ultrasensing and biomedical problems, concentrating on cancer-cell theranostics (therapeutics and diagnostics). In conclusion, we attempt to glimpse into the future by predicting that the next big development of the spasers will be topological nano-optics, and its “killer” application will be ultrafast, high-density on-chip communications for future information processing.
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 054002
Author Affiliations
Abstract
1 Swinburne University of Technology, Centre for Microphotonics, Faculty of Science, Engineering, and Technology, Hawthorn, Australia
2 National University of Singapore, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Singapore
3 Rutgers University, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Piscataway, New Jersey, United States
4 University of Melbourne, Department of Chemical Engineering, Melbourne, Australia
5 Monash University, Monash Centre for Atomically Thin Materials, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Clayton, Australia
Microbubbles acting as lenses are interesting for optical and photonic applications such as volumetric displays, optical resonators, integration of photonic components onto chips, high-resolution spectroscopy, lithography, and imaging. However, stable, rationally designed, and uniform microbubbles on substrates such as silicon chips are challenging because of the random nature of microbubble formation. We describe the fabrication of elastic microbubbles with a precise control of volume and curvature based on femtosecond laser irradiated graphene oxide. We demonstrate that the graphene microbubbles possess a near-perfect curvature that allows them to function as reflective microlenses for focusing broadband white light into an ultrahigh aspect ratio diffraction-limited photonic jet without chromatic aberration. Our results provide a pathway for integration of graphene microbubbles as lenses for nanophotonic components for miniaturized lab-on-a-chip devices along with applications in high-resolution spectroscopy and imaging.
graphene microbubble photonic jet microlens 
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 055001
Author Affiliations
Abstract
1 Towson University, Department of Physics Astronomy and Geosciences, Towson, Maryland, United States
2 University of Maryland, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, College Park, Maryland, United States
Recently, it was predicted that extraordinary light waves in hyperbolic metamaterials may exhibit two-time physics behavior. We report experimental observation of this effect via investigation of gravity-like nonlinear optics of iron/cobalt-based ferrofluid hyperbolic metamaterials. In addition to conventional temporal coordinates, the spatial coordinate oriented along the optical axis of the metamaterial also exhibits timelike character, which leads to very unusual two-time physics behavior in these systems on small scales.
hyperbolic metamaterial nonlinear optics ferrofluid 
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 056001
Author Affiliations
Abstract
1 Shenzhen University, College of Physics and Optoelectronic Engineering, Shenzhen Key Lab of Micro-Nano Photonic Information Technology, Shenzhen, China
2 Shenzhen University, College of Electronic Information Engineering, Shenzhen, China
3 Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique, Centre Énergie Matériaux Télécommunications, Laboratory of Applied Computational Imaging, Varennes, Québec, Canada
We report a framing imaging based on noncollinear optical parametric amplification (NCOPA), named FINCOPA, which applies NCOPA for the first time to single-shot ultrafast optical imaging. In an experiment targeting a laser-induced air plasma grating, FINCOPA achieved 50 fs-resolved optical imaging with a spatial resolution of ~83 lp / mm and an effective frame rate of 10 trillion frames per second (Tfps). It has also successfully visualized an ultrafast rotating optical field with an effective frame rate of 15 Tfps. FINCOPA has simultaneously a femtosecond-level temporal resolution and frame interval and a micrometer-level spatial resolution. Combining outstanding spatial and temporal resolutions with an ultrahigh frame rate, FINCOPA will contribute to high-spatiotemporal resolution observations of ultrafast transient events, such as atomic or molecular dynamics in photonic materials, plasma physics, and laser inertial-confinement fusion.
ultrafast imaging spatiotemporal resolution frame rate noncollinear optical parametric amplification 
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 056002
Author Affiliations
Abstract
1 Tel Aviv University, School of Electrical Engineering, Tel Aviv, Israel
2 Yuriy Fedkovych Chernivtsi National University, Department of Radio Engineering and Information Security, Chernivtsi, Ukraine
Interaction of electromagnetic, acoustic, and even gravitational waves with accelerating bodies forms a class of nonstationary time-variant processes. Scattered waves contain intrinsic signatures of motion, which manifest in a broad range of phenomena, including Sagnac interference, and both Doppler and micro-Doppler frequency shifts. Although general relativity is often required to account for motion, instantaneous rest frame approaches are frequently used to describe interactions with slowly accelerating objects. We investigate theoretically and experimentally an interaction regime that is neither relativistic nor adiabatic. The test model considers an accelerating scatterer with a long-lasting relaxation memory. The slow decay rates violate the instantaneous reaction assumption of quasistationarity, introducing non-Markovian contributions to the scattering process. Memory signatures in scattering from a rotating dipole are studied theoretically, showing symmetry breaking of micro-Doppler combs. A quasistationary numeric analysis of scattering in the short-memory limit is proposed and validated experimentally with an example of electromagnetic pulses interacting with a rotating wire.
light–matter interaction electromagnetic scattering quality factor open cavity 
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 056003
Author Affiliations
Abstract
1 Dalian University of Technology, School of Optoelectronic Engineering and Instrumentation Science, Dalian, China
2 Southern University of Science and Technology, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Shenzhen, China
3 University of Birmingham, School of Physics and Astronomy, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Metasurface analogue of the phenomenon of electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) that is originally observed in atomic gases offers diverse applications for new photonic components such as nonlinear optical units, slow-light devices, and biosensors. The development of functional integrated photonic devices requires an active control of EIT in metasurfaces. We demonstrate a reversible switching of the metasurface-induced transparency in the near-infrared region by incorporating a nonvolatile phase change material, Ge2Sb2Te5, into the metasurface design. This leads to an ultrafast reconfigurable transparency window under an excitation of a nanosecond pulsed laser. The measurement agrees well with both theoretical calculation and finite-difference time-domain numerical simulation. Our work paves the way for dynamic metasurface devices such as reconfigurable slow light and biosensing.
metasurfaces electromagnetically induced transparency surface plasmon resonance reconfigurable phase change material 
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 056004
Author Affiliations
Abstract
1 École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Optics Laboratory, Lausanne, Switzerland
2 École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Laboratory of Applied Photonics Devices, Lausanne, Switzerland
The performance of fiber mode-locked lasers is limited due to the high nonlinearity induced by the spatial confinement of the single-mode fiber core. To massively increase the pulse energy of the femtosecond pulses, amplification is performed outside the oscillator. Recently, spatiotemporal mode-locking has been proposed as a new path to fiber lasers. However, the beam quality was highly multimode, and the calculated threshold pulse energy (>100 nJ) for nonlinear beam self-cleaning was challenging to realize. We present an approach to reach high energy per pulse directly in the mode-locked multimode fiber oscillator with a near single-mode output beam. Our approach relies on spatial beam self-cleaning via the nonlinear Kerr effect, and we demonstrate a multimode fiber oscillator with M2 < 1.13 beam profile, up to 24 nJ energy, and sub-100 fs compressed duration. Nonlinear beam self-cleaning is verified both numerically and experimentally for the first time in a mode-locked multimode laser cavity. The reported approach is further power scalable with larger core sized fibers up to a certain level of modal dispersion and could benefit applications that require high-power ultrashort lasers with commercially available optical fibers.
fiber lasers spatiotemporally mode-locked lasers multimode nonlinear fiber optics 
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 056005
Author Affiliations
Abstract
The article provides information about the image on the cover of Advanced Photonics, Volume 2, Issue 5.
Advanced Photonics
2020, 2(5): 059901

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