Methods And Apparatus To Generate Terahertz Waves Through Cascaded Nonlinear Processes
20240385495 ยท 2024-11-21
Inventors
- Steven G. Johnson (Arlington, MA)
- Marin Soljacic (Belmont, MA)
- Charles ROQUES-CARMES (Cambridge, MA, US)
- Yannick Salamin (Arlington, MA, US)
- Zin Lin (Boston, MA, US)
Cpc classification
G02F1/3534
PHYSICS
G02F2201/17
PHYSICS
G02F1/3542
PHYSICS
G02F1/3507
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A system and method that may enable the generation of highly-efficient, high-power, narrow-linewidth, and tunable light sources from microwave frequencies to mid-infrared wavelengths is disclosed. The light source comprises a nonlinear medium coupled to a multi-modal cavity and a high-energy pump source. The nonlinear medium provides three-wave mixing between modes present in the cavity to generate, for example, terahertz waves. The broadband cavity enables cascading nonlinear processes. By engineering the Q-factors of the cavity's many modes, red-shifted (stokes) cascaded nonlinear processes strongly dominate over their blue-shifted (anti-stokes) counterparts, resulting in a quasi-complete depletion of the pump energy into the THz mode.
Claims
1. A system to generate waves having a terahertz frequency, comprising: a pump having a pump frequency, wherein the pump frequency comprises a visible wavelength, a near-infrared wavelength, an infrared wavelength or a mid-infrared wavelength; a multimodal cavity defined by two or more mirrors, wherein the modes are separated by the terahertz frequency of interest or a fraction of it, and wherein at least one of the two or more mirrors comprises a frequency dependent mirror having a frequency dependent transmissivity or reflectivity profile; and a nonlinear medium disposed within the cavity.
2. (canceled)
3. The system of claim 1, wherein the multimodal cavity comprises at least 10 modes.
4. (canceled)
5. (canceled)
6. The system of claim 1, wherein the nonlinear medium comprises one or more of LiNbO.sub.3, LiTaO.sub.3, LiIO.sub.3, KNbO.sub.3, BaTiO.sub.3, KDP, KTP, BBO, LBO, GaAs, GaP, GaSb, GaSe, ZnSe, ZnTe, CdTe, Cds, CdSe, AgGaSe.sub.2, AgSbS.sub.3, InP, Zno, ZGP, CSP, InAs, InSb, Te, CdGaAs.sub.2, CdGeP.sub.2, DAST, OH1, DSTMS, BNA, LAPC, Fe/Au, Fe/Pt, YIG/Pt, YIG/Cu.sub.1?xIr.sub.x, Ni.sub.89Fe.sub.19, CO.sub.70Fe.sub.30, CoFeB alloys, KNO.sub.3, KTa.sub.xNb.sub.1?xO.sub.3, BaxSr.sub.1?xTiO.sub.3, SrBaNbO.sub.3, K.sub.3Li.sub.2Nb.sub.5O.sub.15, K.sub.x Na.sub.1?xSr.sub.yBa.sub.1?y-Nb.sub.2O.sub.6, KH.sub.2PO.sub.4, KH.sub.2AsO.sub.4, NH.sub.4H.sub.2PO.sub.4, ND.sub.4D.sub.2PO.sub.4, RbH.sub.2AsO.sub.4, KTiOPO.sub.4, KTiOAsO.sub.4, RbTiOPO.sub.4, RbTiOAsO.sub.4, CsTIOAsO.sub.4, Pb (ZrxTi.sub.1?x) O3, La-doped Pb(Zr.sub.x, Ti.sub.1?x)O.sub.3, (1?x) [Pb(Mg.sub.1/3Nb.sub.2/3O.sub.3)?x[PbTiO.sub.3], and (1?x) [Pb (Zr.sub.1/3Nb.sub.2/3O.sub.3)?x [PbTiO.sub.3), (0<x<1; 0<y<1).
7. The system of claim 1, wherein the frequency dependent mirror defines a portion of the cavity and is configured such that reflectivity of modes having a frequency less than the pump frequency comprise a first value, and the reflectivity of at least one mode having a frequency greater than the pump frequency comprises a second value, less than the first value.
8. The system of claim 7, wherein the first value is greater than the second value by at least a factor of 2.
9. (canceled)
10. (canceled)
11. (canceled)
12. (canceled)
13. (canceled)
14. (canceled)
15. The system of claim 1, wherein the frequency dependent mirror is disposed within the cavity and is configured such that transmissivity of modes having a frequency less than the pump frequency comprise a first value, and the transmissivity of at least one mode having a frequency greater than the pump frequency comprises a second value, less than the first value.
16. The system of claim 15, wherein the first value is greater than the second value by at least a factor of 2.
17. (canceled)
18. (canceled)
19. (canceled)
20. (canceled)
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23. The system of claim 1, wherein the cavity supports at least 5 cascading orders.
24. (canceled)
25. (canceled)
26. (canceled)
27. (canceled)
28. (canceled)
29. The system of claim 1, wherein a quantum efficiency of the system is greater than 500%.
30. (canceled)
31. (canceled)
32. (canceled)
33. (canceled)
34. The system of claim 1, wherein at least one of the two or more mirrors comprises a metallic mirror, a Plano (flat) mirror, or a focusing concave or parabolic mirror with off-axis angles varying from 0? to 90?.
35. The system of claim 1, wherein the cavity is arranged as a ring configuration.
36. The system of claim 1, wherein the cavity is arranged as a semi-confocal or confocal configuration.
37. The system of claim 1, wherein the cavity is arranged as a bow-tie configuration.
38. The system of claim 1, wherein the pump comprises a second mode, defined as a seed or low-frequency pump, and wherein the pump frequency and the seed are separated by the terahertz frequency.
39. A system to generate waves having a terahertz frequency, comprising: a pump having at least one mode, wherein at least one mode is defined as a pump frequency, wherein the pump frequency comprises a visible wavelength, a near-infrared wavelength, an infrared wavelength or a mid-infrared wavelength; and a non-linear resonator, wherein the quantum efficiency of the system is greater than 500%.
40. The system of claim 39, wherein the pump further comprises at least a second mode and wherein the second mode is defined as seed or low-frequency pump, and wherein the first mode and the second mode are separated by the terahertz frequency.
41. The system of claim 39, wherein a quantum efficiency of the system is greater than 1,000%.
42. (canceled)
43. (canceled)
44. (canceled)
45. The system of claim 39, a Q-factor of at least one frequency less than the pump frequency is greater than a Q-factor of at least one frequency greater than the pump frequency by at least a factor of 2.
46. (canceled)
47. (canceled)
48. (canceled)
49. (canceled)
50. (canceled)
51. (canceled)
52. The system of claim 39, wherein the non-linear resonator comprises a micro-ring resonator coupled to a second micro-ring resonator.
53. The system of claim 52, wherein at least one micro-ring resonator is made from a nonlinear material.
54. The system of claim 52, wherein the micro-ring resonator is coupled to an antenna.
55. The system of claim 39, wherein the non-linear resonator comprises a photonic crystal fiber.
56. The system of claim 55, wherein the photonic crystal fiber is made from a nonlinear material.
57. The system of claim 55, wherein the photonic crystal fiber is filled with a nonlinear material.
58. The system of claim 39, wherein the non-linear resonator comprises a plurality of cavity resonators.
59. The system of claim 39, wherein the nonlinear medium forms the non-linear resonator.
60. The system of claim 39, wherein the nonlinear resonator comprises a photonic crystal cavity.
61. The system of claim 39, wherein the nonlinear resonator comprises a bound state in the continuum.
62. The system of claim 39, wherein a sharp wavelength transition occurs at the pump frequency, and wherein a sharpness, defined as a derivative of a mirror transmission or absorption versus wavelength, is smaller than twice the terahertz frequency.
63. The system of claim 62, wherein the sharpness is smaller than the terahertz frequency.
64. (canceled)
65. (canceled)
66. (canceled)
67. The system of claim 39, wherein the non-linear resonator comprises a plurality of modes, and wherein at least one mode having a frequency greater than the pump frequency has a Q-factor that is less than a Q-factor of a frequency less than the pump frequency.
68. The system of claim 67, wherein the Q-factor of the pump mode is less than the Q-factor of other modes having a frequency less than the pump frequency.
69. The system of claim 67, wherein a Q-factor of the mode with the lowest frequency is less than the Q-factor of other modes having a frequency less than the pump frequency.
70. The system of claim 68, wherein the Q-factor of the pump is at least 2 times smaller than the Q-factor of the other modes having a frequency less than the pump frequency.
71. (canceled)
72. (canceled)
73. (canceled)
74. The system of claim 69, wherein the Q-factor of the mode with the lowest frequency is at least 2 times smaller than the Q-factor of the other modes having a frequency less than the pump frequency.
75. (canceled)
76. (canceled)
77. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] For a better understanding of the present disclosure, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, in which like elements are referenced with like numerals, and in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0038] First, the fundamental principle which can enable the generation of CW or quasi-CW difference frequency generation with a quantum efficiency well above 100% is described. This principle can be used to generate high-power THz waves with the complete depletion of an IR pump. Mathematical details, as well as rigorous nonlinear coupled-mode theory simulations showing the validity of the effect are shown. In this disclosure, the term THz frequency refers to the spectral range between 0.1 THz and 30 THz.
[0039] The general system under consideration is depicted in
[0040]
[0041] The time-evolution of the system can be described by a set of nonlinear coupled-mode equations:
[0042] where a.sub.n is the amplitude of the mode with index n ? [N,N], with frequency ?.sub.n, detuned by ? ?.sub.n, decay rate
and effective nonlinear coupling coefficient ?.sub.n. The mode n is pumped with input power s.sub.n.sup.+. {dot over (x)} denotes the total time-derivative of the variable x. Only modes 0 and 1 are pumped with s.sub.0.sup.+>>s.sub.1.sup.+, as shown with arrows in
[0043] First, consider an ideal situation where frequency detuning ? ?.sub.n may be neglected. Consider an embodiment with N=24 cascading orders and compare the behavior between a traditional cavity with uniform Q's distribution, and an asymmetric cavity with a wavelength dependent modes' Q-factors.
[0044] Note that if red-shifted cascaded processes are favored over blue processes, the THz generation efficiency improves. This is because there are an increased number of cascading orders contributing to the terahertz wave amplification. Thus, by Q-engineering the multimodal cavity, more specifically by considering low-Q blue-shifted modes Q.sub.b and high-Q red-shifted modes Q.sub.r, more red-shifted processes occur. In certain embodiments, Q.sub.r may be greater than Q.sub.b by at least a factor of 2. In certain embodiments, Q.sub.r may be greater than Q.sub.b by at least a factor of .sub.10. In certain embodiments, Q.sub.r may be greater than Q.sub.b by at least a factor of 100. In certain embodiments, Q.sub.r may be greater than Q.sub.b by at least a factor of 500. In certain embodiments, Q.sub.r may be greater than Q.sub.b by at least a factor of 1,000. In certain embodiments, Q.sub.r may be greater than Q.sub.b by at least a factor of 5,000. In certain embodiments, Q.sub.r may be greater than Q.sub.b by at least a factor of 10,000.
[0045] Note that, in certain embodiments, the modes with indices 0 and N, may be assumed to have a lower Q-factor such that Q.sub.b<Q.sub.0,N, and Q.sub.0,N<Q.sub.r, as described in more detail below.
[0046] In one embodiment, with a Q-engineered multimodal cavity of N=199 red-shifted modes (?.sub.0=2?.Math.200 THz, ?.sub.T=2?.Math.1 THZ), a theoretical THz energy conversion efficiency around 99% is possible.
[0047] In
[0048] Thus, the cavity may comprise any number of modes. In certain embodiments, the cavity comprises at least 2 modes. In some embodiments, the cavity comprises at least 10 modes. In certain embodiments, the cavity comprises at least 50 modes. In some embodiments, the cavity comprises at least 100 modes. In some embodiments, the cavity comprises at least 200 modes.
[0049] Interestingly, the system under study may be modeled as a resonator chain coupled along a synthetic dimension in the tight-binding approximation. Modes ?N to N are coupled along with the synthetic dimension corresponding to the mode frequency ?, as shown in
[0050] In certain embodiments, the possibility of backward propagation and subsequent THz annihilation can be problematic in achieving high-efficiency THz generation. Therefore, according to another embodiment, the resonator chain along the synthetic dimension is copied M times along another (synthetic or real) dimension, thus resulting in a 2D array of coupled resonators, as shown in
[0051] In other words, by reducing the coupling between ?.sub.0 and ?.sub.1 and between ?.sub.N?1 and ?.sub.N (as compared to the coupling between ?.sub.x and ?.sub.x+1, where x is between 1 and N?2), reflections may be reduced. Thus, the Q-factors of the ?.sub.0 and ?.sub.N modes may be different than the Q-factors (Q.sub.r or Q.sub.n) for the rest of the red-shifted frequencies. Further, in some embodiments, the Q-factor of the THz mode (?.sub.T) may be different and may be smaller than Q.sub.r.
[0052] Having described the physics associated with this system, the basic components of the light source based on the intracavity cascaded nonlinear frequency generation and possible embodiments are now disclosed.
[0053] This light source comprises one or more pump sources, a multi-mode cavity or multiple coupled single-mode resonators, and one or more embedded nonlinear crystals. In this light source, there is a sharp wavelength dependence of the loss, or coupling rate. The dependence may be external, such as from the cavity coupling mirror, or internal, such as from an intra-cavity absorptive filter. The pump source may be CW or pulsed. Possible pulse widths range from millisecond or microsecond to nanoseconds and femtosecond. In one embodiment, the pump source linewidth should be smaller than the cavity mode linewidth to excite a single longitudinal mode.
[0054] First, ultra-efficient conversion efficiencies are quantified and essential figures of merit and quantities that describe the proposed devices' performance are defined. The main figures of merit for the nonlinear light source are: [0055] (1) the photon efficiency, also referred to as the quantum efficiency ?.sub.QE, and [0056] (2) energy efficiency ?.sub.e.
[0057] For a single-stage nonlinear process in which all the incident photons are converted to idler and signal photons, the quantum efficiency reaches a maximum of 1 (or 100%). The energy conversion efficiency is defined in the case of no seed (zero power at the signal frequency ?.sub.s) as the ratio between the generated idler power and the pump power, expressed as
The energy conversion efficiency can be normalized by the pump to idler frequency ratio, leading to the quantum efficiency,
If the signal is non-zero at the input, the total quantum efficiency for the idler frequency is defined as
[0058] It follows that for a single-stage nonlinear frequency mixing, the maximum quantum efficiency is 1 (or 100%). When cascading nonlinear processes are possible, the energy converted to the signal frequency is used to initiate subsequent nonlinear frequency mixing processes to amplify the original idler frequency. This way, multiple idler photons are generated from a single pump photon through the cascading nonlinear processes, and the quantum efficiency of the conversion process from initial pump frequency to idler frequency becomes much larger than 100%. For example, in an embodiment with more than 50 cascading orders, one can achieve a quantum efficiency of more than 5,000%. In the following, the idler frequency is referred to as the generated terahertz frequency ?.sub.T.
[0059] This arrangement of components produces a light source that not only improves the overall conversion efficiency but enables high-power terahertz sources. With the addition of the Q-engineered sharp wavelength dependent resonator, this light source can overcome the MR limit by more than an order of magnitude. The systems and methods discussed herein lead to the generation of high-power, single-mode, and tunable single-frequency (or narrow-bandwidth) light sources spanning the microwave, THz, and MIR range.
[0060] In one embodiment, the light source for terahertz generation may be realized using a broadband resonator with a sharp wavelength dependence coupled to a nonlinear medium and excited by a pump source. Explicit parameters of the device for some of the embodiments are described below.
[0061] In certain embodiments, the optical resonator may be based on, for example, free space, fiber based or integrated implementations.
[0062]
[0063] In
[0064] In
[0065] In
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[0071] While
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[0074] For example, the resonator may be a bow-tie cavity, a ring resonator, a Fabry-Perot cavity, a confocal or semi-confocal cavity, or other types of mirror cavities.
[0075] With respect to
[0076] Further, there is no a priori restriction on whether the cavity is wavelength-scale or macroscopic. Therefore, cavity dimensions can vary from 100 nm (integrated embodiments) to a few-meter scale (free-space embodiments). Additionally, the cavity length for the pump and cascading orders and the idler frequency can either be the same or of different length(s).
[0077] As shown in
[0078] Further, there is no a priori restriction on the number of mirrors forming the cavity. Therefore, a cavity can be formed by zero, two or more mirrors. The focal length of the focusing mirror can vary from millimeter, centimeter, and meter scale to infinity for Plano mirrors.
[0079] As shown in
[0080] In certain embodiments, the resonator is formed by a photonic crystal fiber made completely, or partially from a nonlinear medium, or can be infiltrated with a nonlinear medium. In some embodiments, the cross-section of the photonic crystal fiber can be engineered to provide a sharp wavelength dependent transmission.
[0081] In certain embodiments, the resonator comprises an integrated photonic crystal waveguide made from completely, or partially form a nonlinear medium. The photonic crystal waveguide dispersion can be engineered to provide a sharp wavelength dependent cavity.
[0082] For example,
[0083] In one embodiment, the resonator is based on optical confinement achieved through, for example, index variation or total internal reflection. Examples of structures are photonic crystal cavities, bound-state in the continuum (BIC), micro-ring antennas, and other resonators, types of high-Q optical confinement structures. In certain embodiments, the cavity can have different dimensions for different wavelengths (modes). In some embodiments, the cavity spectral response can be engineered to a sharp wavelength dependence.
[0084] In some embodiments, the light source comprises one, two or more cavity resonators. The individual resonators can be either one listed above, or any other type of resonator. The individual resonators can be the same type or be of different types.
[0085] In some embodiments, such as that shown in
[0086] As shown in
[0087] In some embodiments, the resonator is made of the nonlinear medium. The resonator can be multimode from a single medium, or multimode operation can be provided by multiple individual resonators coupled together. In certain embodiments, the nonlinear medium can be the cavity resonator. One, two or more facets of the nonlinear medium can be coated or polished to provide wavelength dependent or broadband reflective properties.
[0088] As explained above, the cavity transmission or absorption exhibits a sharp frequency dependence, such that, in the former case, the cavity leakage rate, or in the latter case, the cavity internal absorption rate, is wavelength dependent. The sharp wavelength transition may happen at the pump wavelength and control the Q-factor of the pump cavity mode. The sharpness of the wavelength transition is defined as the spectral width of the transition between high Q-factor modes and low Q-factor modes, and can be expressed as the derivative of the mirror transmission versus wavelength S=dT/d?. The spectral width can be expressed either in frequency, wavelength, or a percentage. The spectral width, or sharpness, should be about twice the idler frequency or smaller. In an embodiment in which the sharpness is not exactly twice or smaller than the idler frequency, a slightly reduced efficiency can be expected. In certain embodiments, the sharpness may be one times the idler frequency. In some embodiments, the sharpness may be smaller than ? the idler frequency. In some embodiments, the sharpness may be smaller than ? the idler frequency. In certain embodiments, the sharpness may be smaller than 3 times the idler frequency. In some embodiments, the sharpness may be smaller than 5 times the idler frequency. In some embodiments, the sharpness may be smaller than 10 times the idler frequency.
[0089] The wavelength dependence should lead to low Q-factors for modes on the blue-shifted (shorter wavelength) of the pump wavelength. A large asymmetry between red and blue modes Q-factors may give the best efficiency. Thus, in some embodiments, 1, or 2 or more blue shifted modes (referred to as Q.sub.b) have a low Q factor. The low Q-factor can have absolute values on the order of 10, 100, or 1,000 or can be smaller than the red-shifted modes Q-factors (Q.sub.r) by a factor of 10, 100, 1,000, or 10,000 or more. In certain embodiments, a large difference between Q-factors of the red-shifted modes (referred to as Q.sub.r or Q.sub.n) and the pump mode (referred to as Q.sub.0 provides a more efficient cascading process.
[0090] In certain embodiments, either a cavity mirror, or an intra-cavity filter can provide the wavelength dependence. This may be realized by having an in-coupling mirror with frequency dependence, or an intra-cavity spectral filter. The intra-cavity filter can be either absorptive (referred to as filter) or reflective (referred to as intra-cavity mirror). This can be achieved with, for example, an edge filter, or notch filter for the former, or a dichroic mirror for the latter. In certain embodiments, such as shown in
[0091] In certain embodiments, such as is shown in
[0092] In some embodiments, a frequency dependent system can be achieved with non-reciprocal coupling of multi-resonators. In this embodiment, blue-shifted modes are forbidden through the non-reciprocity between resonators.
[0093] The nonlinearity described above should provide three-wave mixing and thus should generally be of second-order and may be provided by conventional non-centrosymmetric nonlinear media with strong nonlinearities. Possible materials include common inorganic crystals such LiNbO.sub.3, LiTaO.sub.3, LiIO.sub.3, KNbO.sub.3, BaTiO.sub.3, KDP, KTP, BBO, LBO, GaAs, GaP, GaSb, GaSe, ZnSe, ZnTe, CdTe, CdS, CdSe, AgGaSe.sub.2, AgSbS.sub.3, InP, Zno, ZGP, CSP, InAs, InSb, Te, CdGaAs.sub.2, CdGeP.sub.2, or organic crystals such as DAST, OH1, DSTMS, BNA, LAPC, or ferromagnetic/nonmagnetic alloys such as Fe/Au, Fe/Pt, YIG/Pt, YIG/Cu.sub.1?xIr.sub.x, or ferromagnetic alloys such as Ni.sub.89Fe.sub.19, Co.sub.70Fe.sub.30, CoFeB alloys, or ferroelectric materials such as KNO.sub.3, KTa.sub.xNb.sub.1?xO.sub.3, BaxSr.sub.1?xTiO.sub.3, SrBaNbO.sub.3, K.sub.3Li.sub.2Nb.sub.5O.sub.15, K.sub.xNa.sub.1?xSryBa.sub.1?yNb.sub.2O.sub.6, KH.sub.2PO.sub.4, KH.sub.2AsO.sub.4, NH.sub.4H.sub.2PO.sub.4, ND.sub.4D.sub.2PO.sub.4, RbH.sub.2ASO.sub.4, KTiOPO.sub.4, KTiOAsO.sub.4, RbTiOPO.sub.4, RbTiOAsO.sub.4, CsTiOASO.sub.4, Pb(ZrxTi.sub.1?x)O.sub.3, La-doped Pb(Zr.sub.x, Ti.sub.1?x)O.sub.3, (1?x) [Pb(Mg.sub.1/.sub.3Nb.sub.2/.sub.3O.sub.3)?x[PbTiO.sub.3], (1?x) [Pb(Zr.sub.1/3Nb.sub.2/3O.sub.3)?x[PbTiO.sub.3), (0<x<1; 0<y<1), but is not limited thereto. Artificially induced second-order media such as metamaterials can also be used.
[0094] In some embodiments, a third-order nonlinear medium can be used to achieve an effective second-order response by, for example, applying a continuous-current (DC) electric field. Possible materials include silicon or germanium but are not limited thereto.
[0095] In some embodiments, multiple nonlinear effects such as second-order, third-order, and others, can exist simultaneously. Non second-order nonlinear effects can be weakened by increasing the beam radius of the pump, and other modes, in the nonlinear medium, reducing the infrared intensity in the nonlinear medium at constant pump power, and with it unwanted nonlinear effects. In certain embodiments, a third order nonlinearity can be exploited as another degree of freedom
[0096] The nonlinear medium 12 can possess birefringence or be periodically polled allowing for various phase matching techniques. There is no a priori restriction on the length of the nonlinear medium. Therefore, the nonlinear medium length can vary from 100 nm (preferred for integrated embodiments) to a centimeter scale (preferred for free-space embodiments). Further, there is no restriction on the form of the nonlinear medium. Therefore, the nonlinear medium can come in any shape or combination of shapes. This includes patterning of the nonlinear medium, as well as combining different nonlinear mediums. The nonlinear medium can have an anti-reflective coating for the pump, cascading modes, and idler, or for individual wavelengths. The nonlinear medium can also be at the Brewster angle to reduce Fresnel reflections, or to compensate for astigmatism in bow-tie cavities using concave mirrors.
[0097] In certain embodiments, a broadband cavity is utilized which allows for a plurality of nonlinear cascading orders. For example, there may be 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 or more cascading orders. In embodiments with more than 5, 10, 50, 100, or 200 cascading orders, a quantum efficiency larger than 500%, 1,000%, 5,000%, 10,000% and 20,000% can be achieved, respectively.
[0098] The frequency of the nonlinear cascading orders should preferably be equally spaced by the idler (terahertz) frequency. Dispersion from nonlinear medium, mirrors and other optical elements in the cavity can detune the cavity resonant modes frequencies. There are various techniques that may be used to mitigate this dispersion. These techniques include: [0099] Using a large cavity length to nonlinear crystal ratio to minimize dispersion effect. Possible cavity to nonlinear medium lengths ratios are on the order of 1,000, 100, 10, 1, but not limited thereto; [0100] Dispersion compensation with a double pair of prisms, or diffractive gratings; [0101] Use of a cavity with low Q-factors which increases the mode bandwidth, and consequently, reduces the dispersion impact; and [0102] Dispersion engineering in micro resonator by geometrical or mode engineering.
[0103] The frequency detuning induced by dispersion over the pump mode, or the N mode, or both modes, is defined as ??.sub.n, while the decay rate is defined as ?.sub.0. In certain embodiments, the ratio of the frequency detuning to the decay rate is less, equal, or approximately 1
[0104] As described above, a pump source is used to excite the cavity and initiate the nonlinear process. The pump source can be continuous-wave or pulsed. The pump source can have pulse widths varying from milliseconds, microseconds, nanoseconds, picoseconds to femtoseconds. Narrow pump pulse widths (e.g. nanoseconds, picoseconds, femtoseconds) may be widened and shaped by temporal or spectral pulse shaping techniques. In one embodiment, pulse broadening and shaping (flat-top) is accomplished by the coherent stacking of 2 or more replicas of the input pump pulse. In another embodiment, Fourier-transform limited pulses can be broadened by narrow passband filtering.
[0105] The single-frequency operation of the light source can be further enhanced by using a pump with a narrow linewidth such as a stabilized external cavity laser or injection seeded nanosecond pulsed laser.
[0106] In some embodiments, a second pump, also referred to as the signal or seed, can be used to control the idler (terahertz) frequency. The idler frequency is defined by the spectral difference between the main and secondary sources. The spectral difference should be larger than the pump linewidth and up to 30 THz and more. Continuous tuning of the idler frequency may be achieved by mechanical (piezo) or thermal tuning of the cavity to adjust the free spectral range. The seed can also be continuous-wave or pulsed. The power of the second pump (seed) can range from below 1 mW to more than 100 W.
[0107] In some embodiments, the idler (terahertz) frequency is defined by the phase matching condition of the nonlinear medium at the pump frequency.
[0108] In some embodiments, the light source can be realized using multiple coupled resonators. The individual cavities may be weakly coupled. The individual resonators may be, for example, a photonic crystal resonance mode, or Mie-resonant dielectric structures, or other localized optical modes. Other types of resonators mentioned in the above embodiment can also work. In one embodiment, the resonant structures would be commensurate with the pump wavelength, such as between 500 nm and 10 microns. Sharp frequency-dependent transmission may be realized by controlling the individual resonators frequencies and Q-factors.
[0109] In certain embodiments, broadband operation is provided by the number of individual cavities. Dispersion can be compensated by the individual cavity design.
[0110] In one embodiment, the light source can be realized in a chain of coupled resonators along a synthetic frequency dimension, as shown in
[0111] In this embodiment, the pump and Q-factor distributions are chosen to favor the excitation of a forward propagating mode along with the mode index direction N (towards decreasing values in synthetic frequency space ?). Importantly, the mode N at the end of the chain is chosen to minimize reflection at the boundary of the synthetic dimension with ?.sub.N?? (since a backward propagating wave would result in THz annihilation).
[0112] In another embodiment, the embodiment of
[0113] Having defined various possible embodiments, several actual configurations are described next.
[0114] In one embodiment, a broadband ring resonator is formed by four mirrors, two 90? off-axis parabolic mirrors and two flat mirrors. This may be similar to the configuration shown in
[0115] In another embodiment, the system comprises a free-space optical cavity length of 2 meters for the IR wavelength, a cavity length of 0.5 meter for the THz frequency, and a OH1 crystal having a length of 500 ?m as the nonlinear medium. This configuration may be similar to that shown in
[0116] In another embodiment, the ring cavity has identical free-space optical cavity length of 0.15 meter for the IR and THz modes, and a OH1 crystal having a length of 600 ?m is used as the nonlinear medium. The cavity modes Q-factors are depicted in
[0117] In another embodiment, a cavity with the same parameters as the previous embodiment is utilized. However, in this embodiment, pulse shaping is used to obtain about three times longer pump pulses from the 10 ns initial pump. ?20 cavity modes are considered with a 3.Math.10 ns pulse pump at a wavelength ?.sub.0=1.064 ?m and THz frequency ?.sub.T=2?.Math.1 THz. The cavity modes Q-factors are depicted in
[0118] In one embodiment shown in
[0119] The experimental embodiment with N=7 red-shifted modes is considered, corresponding to an optical bandwidth of 28 nm for pump wavelength ?.sub.0=1.064 ?m and THz frequency ?.sub.T=2?.Math.1 THz. The pump source comprises a high-power nanosecond pulsed laser 1306 at a center wavelength of ?.sub.0=1.064 ?m and a Fourier transform limited pulse with a width of 30 ns. A second low-frequency tunable continuous-wave pump 1307 (signal), with frequency ?.sub.1=1.068 ?m, and linewidth below 10 MHz is used to control the terahertz frequency. Optical lenses 1308, 1309 are used to match the beam profile to the cavity eigenmode, i.e. mode matching. The two pumps are combined before coupling to the cavity. At the output of the cavity, an off-axis parabolic mirror 1310 with a through hole is used to separately analyze the infrared and terahertz signals.
[0120] A photon efficiency of ?.sub.QE?140%, at a pump peak power P.sub.0=1 MW is estimated, more than 1.4 times the MR limit.
[0121] The cavity modes Q-factors are depicted in
[0122] In another embodiment, shown in
[0123] The cavity modes Q-factors are depicted in
[0124] This system and method have many advantages. Efficient, high-power, tunable single-frequency terahertz sources are of high interest for a wide range of applications, including security scanners, radar imaging, astronomy, spectroscopy and telecommunications, as well as for scientific research to probe new phase transitions in quantum materials or electron beam acceleration for X-ray sources. While high-power terahertz sources are available in large facilities, the opportunities to have a widely available and compact, high-power and efficient terahertz source will create numerous new opportunities for the above-mentioned applications.
[0125] The present disclosure is not to be limited in scope by the specific embodiments described herein. Indeed, other various embodiments of and modifications to the present disclosure, in addition to those described herein, will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art from the foregoing description and accompanying drawings. Thus, such other embodiments and modifications are intended to fall within the scope of the present disclosure. Further, although the present disclosure has been described herein in the context of a particular implementation in a particular environment for a particular purpose, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that its usefulness is not limited thereto and that the present disclosure may be beneficially implemented in any number of environments for any number of purposes. Accordingly, the claims set forth below should be construed in view of the full breadth and spirit of the present disclosure as described herein.