G02B6/02061

SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR PLASMONIC CONTROL OF SHORT PULSES IN OPTICAL FIBERS

The present disclosure relates to an optical waveguide system. The system may include a first waveguide having a core-guide and a material portion surrounding and encasing the core-guide. The core-guide enables a core-guide mode for an optical signal travelling through the core-guide. A second waveguide forms a lossy waveguide on an outer surface of the first waveguide. The construction of the second waveguide is such as to achieve a desired coupling between the core-guide mode and the lossy waveguide to control an energy level of the optical signal travelling through the core-guide.

Electronic Devices With Gaze Trackers

A head-mounted device may include a housing having openings that receive lenses. Displays may output images. Waveguides that overlap the lenses may receive the images from the displays and may direct the images to eye boxes that are aligned with the lenses. Infrared light sources such as infrared light-emitting diodes or lasers may be used to supply infrared light to the waveguides. Each waveguide may have multiple localized output couplers that overlap the lenses. The localized output couplers of each lens each direct a beam of the infrared light out of the waveguide towards an eye surface in the eye box associated with that lens to produce an eye glint. A gaze tracker infrared camera may captured images of the eye glints to determine a user's point of gaze.

Systems and methods for dynamic spectral shaping in optical communications
10298317 · 2019-05-21 · ·

A method is described in which a loss of spectrum in an optical signal having an optical signal spectrum is detected. The optical signal is transmitted from a first node to a second node. In response to detecting the loss of spectrum in the optical signal, at least one idler carrier without data imposed is supplied into the optical signal spectrum transmitted from the first node to the second node, the optical signal spectrum encompassing a frequency band including a plurality of optical channels, the idler carrier being amplified stimulated emission light having a frequency corresponding to a first optical channel of the plurality of optical channels.

Optical microresonator device with thermal isolation

A thermal microring optical sensor is configured such that a portion of the optical resonator and its associated waveguide are encased within a cladding structure to minimize scattering losses along the waveguide and also provide improved evanescent coupling efficiency between the waveguide and the resonator. Functioning as a thermal sensor, incoming radiation modifies the temperature of the resonator, which changes its resonant frequency and, as a result, the percentage of light that it evanescently couples from the waveguide. The cladding structure also functions as a mechanical support for the resonator disk, eliminating the need for a pedestal to suspend the disk above the support substrate. Thermally-induced buckling of the optical waveguide is also reduced by encasing the susceptible portion of the waveguiding within the cladding structure.

METHOD FOR IMPROVED OPTICAL POWER STABILITY AND PREDICTABILITY IN FIBER OPTICAL NETWORKS
20180267266 · 2018-09-20 ·

A method is described in which a database is monitored. The database includes information specifying allocations of time periods in which a first optical carrier corresponding to a first optical channel will not be supplying encoded first data into output optical signals being transmitted from a first node to a second node. An idler carrier being amplified stimulated emission light having a frequency corresponding to the first optical channel is supplied into the output optical signals transmitted from the first node to the second node during the time periods in which the first optical carrier will not be supplying encoded first data into the output optical signals.

SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR DYNAMIC SPECTRAL SHAPING IN OPTICAL COMMUNICATIONS
20180269964 · 2018-09-20 ·

A method is described in which a loss of spectrum in an optical signal having an optical signal spectrum is detected. The optical signal is transmitted from a first node to a second node. In response to detecting the loss of spectrum in the optical signal, at least one idler carrier without data imposed is supplied into the optical signal spectrum transmitted from the first node to the second node, the optical signal spectrum encompassing a frequency band including a plurality of optical channels, the idler carrier being amplified stimulated emission light having a frequency corresponding to a first optical channel of the plurality of optical channels.

Method for making an optical element having a textured surface and an optical element having a textured surface
09945985 · 2018-04-17 · ·

There is provided a method for making an optical element having a textured surface. The method comprises the steps of: a) providing a plurality of primary optical fiber segments, each primary fiber segment comprising one or more cores; b) bundling the primary fiber segments into an assembly with the cores of said primary fiber segments extending parallely; c) transforming the assembly into a secondary structure comprising the parallely extending cores; and d) etching a surface of the secondary structure according to an etch profile of said secondary structure, the etch profile being defined by the parallely extending cores, thereby forming the textured surface of the optical element. An optical element having a textured surface is also provided.

TECHNOLOGIES FOR A HYBRID OPTICAL CHIP-TO-CHIP COUPLING
20250004215 · 2025-01-02 · ·

Technologies for hybrid optical chip-to-chip coupling are disclosed. In an illustrative embodiment, light from a waveguide in a photonic integrated circuit (PIC) die is collimated using a micromirror and directed towards a glass substrate. Another micromirror in the glass substrate focuses the light into a waveguide defined in a bulk layer of the glass substrate. In the illustrative embodiment, the waveguide is directly written into the bulk layer using an ultrafast laser. The glass substrate also has waveguides with a large difference in the index of refraction in a layer above the bulk substrate, such as silicon nitride waveguides in silicon oxide cladding. The directly-written waveguides can be evanescently coupled to the silicon nitride waveguides. The silicon nitride waveguides can then be used for two-dimensional routing throughout the glass substrate. The light can be coupled back into a directly-written waveguide before it is transmitted to another PIC die.

Optical device having efficient light-matter interface for quantum simulations

An optical device comprising a single-photon device, which is coupled to a planar waveguide is described. The planar waveguide comprises a nanostructured section, which includes a longitudinal extending guiding region with a first side and a second side, a first nanostructure arranged on the first side of the guiding region, and a second nanostructure arranged on the second side of the guiding region. The nanostructured section comprises a slow-mode section, in which the single-photon device is positioned or embedded, and in which the first nanostructure and second nanostructure suppress spontaneous emission into other modes. The planar waveguide further comprises a fiber coupler for coupling light out of the planar waveguide and into an optical fiber, the fiber coupler preferably being adapted to match a field profile of an optical fiber.

OPTICAL DEVICE HAVING EFFICIENT LIGHT-MATTER INTERFACE FOR QUANTUM SIMULATIONS

An optical device comprising a single-photon device, which is coupled to a planar waveguide is described. The planar waveguide comprises a nanostructured section, which includes a longitudinal extending guiding region with a first side and a second side, a first nanostructure arranged on the first side of the guiding region, and a second nanostructure arranged on the second side of the guiding region. The nanostructured section comprises a slow-mode section, in which the single-photon device is positioned or embedded, and in which the first nanostructure and second nanostructure suppress spontaneous emission into other modes. The planar waveguide further comprises a fibre coupler for coupling light out of the planar waveguide and into an optical fibre, the fibre coupler preferably being adapted to match a field profile of an optical fibre.