Phase Conjugation via Four-Wave Mixing in a Resonant Medium

<p>This thesis describes the theoretical solution and experimental verification of phase conjugation via nondegenerate four-wave mixing in resonant media. The theoretical work models the resonant medium as a two-level atomic system with the lower state of the system being the ground state of t...

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Main Author: Nilsen, Joseph Michael
Format: Others
Published: 1982
Online Access:https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/8081/1/Nilsen_jm_1982.pdf
Nilsen, Joseph Michael (1982) Phase Conjugation via Four-Wave Mixing in a Resonant Medium. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/RV9B-GV44. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:02182014-143316560 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:02182014-143316560>
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description <p>This thesis describes the theoretical solution and experimental verification of phase conjugation via nondegenerate four-wave mixing in resonant media. The theoretical work models the resonant medium as a two-level atomic system with the lower state of the system being the ground state of the atom. Working initially with an ensemble of stationary atoms, the density matrix equations are solved by third-order perturbation theory in the presence of the four applied electro-magnetic fields which are assumed to be nearly resonant with the atomic transition. Two of the applied fields are assumed to be non-depleted counterpropagating pump waves while the third wave is an incident signal wave. The fourth wave is the phase conjugate wave which is generated by the interaction of the three previous waves with the nonlinear medium. The solution of the density matrix equations gives the local polarization of the atom. The polarization is used in Maxwell's equations as a source term to solve for the propagation and generation of the signal wave and phase conjugate wave through the nonlinear medium. Studying the dependence of the phase conjugate signal on the various parameters such as frequency, we show how an ultrahigh-Q isotropically sensitive optical filter can be constructed using the phase conjugation process.</p> <p>In many cases the pump waves may saturate the resonant medium so we also present another solution to the density matrix equations which is correct to all orders in the amplitude of the pump waves since the third-order solution is correct only to first-order in each of the field amplitudes. In the saturated regime, we predict several new phenomena associated with degenerate four-wave mixing and also describe the ac Stark effect and how it modifies the frequency response of the filtering process. We also show how a narrow bandwidth optical filter with an efficiency greater than unity can be constructed.</p> <p>In many atomic systems the atoms are moving at significant velocities such that the Doppler linewidth of the system is larger than the homogeneous linewidth. The latter linewidth dominates the response of the ensemble of stationary atoms. To better understand this case the density matrix equations are solved to third-order by perturbation theory for an atom of velocity v. The solution for the polarization is then integrated over the velocity distribution of the macroscopic system which is assumed to be a gaussian distribution of velocities since that is an excellent model of many real systems. Using the Doppler broadened system, we explain how a tunable optical filter can be constructed whose bandwidth is limited by the homogeneous linewidth of the atom while the tuning range of the filter extends over the entire Doppler profile.</p> <p>Since it is a resonant system, sodium vapor is used as the nonlinear medium in our experiments. The relevant properties of sodium are discussed in great detail. In particular, the wavefunctions of the 3S and 3P states are analyzed and a discussion of how the 3S-3P transition models a two-level system is given.</p> <p>Using sodium as the nonlinear medium we demonstrate an ultrahigh-Q optical filter using phase conjugation via nondegenerate four-wave mixing as the filtering process. The filter has a FWHM bandwidth of 41 MHz and a maximum efficiency of 4 x 10<sup>-3</sup>. However, our theoretical work and other experimental work with sodium suggest that an efficient filter with both gain and a narrower bandwidth should be quite feasible.</p>
author Nilsen, Joseph Michael
spellingShingle Nilsen, Joseph Michael
Phase Conjugation via Four-Wave Mixing in a Resonant Medium
author_facet Nilsen, Joseph Michael
author_sort Nilsen, Joseph Michael
title Phase Conjugation via Four-Wave Mixing in a Resonant Medium
title_short Phase Conjugation via Four-Wave Mixing in a Resonant Medium
title_full Phase Conjugation via Four-Wave Mixing in a Resonant Medium
title_fullStr Phase Conjugation via Four-Wave Mixing in a Resonant Medium
title_full_unstemmed Phase Conjugation via Four-Wave Mixing in a Resonant Medium
title_sort phase conjugation via four-wave mixing in a resonant medium
publishDate 1982
url https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/8081/1/Nilsen_jm_1982.pdf
Nilsen, Joseph Michael (1982) Phase Conjugation via Four-Wave Mixing in a Resonant Medium. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/RV9B-GV44. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:02182014-143316560 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:02182014-143316560>
work_keys_str_mv AT nilsenjosephmichael phaseconjugationviafourwavemixinginaresonantmedium
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spelling ndltd-CALTECH-oai-thesis.library.caltech.edu-80812020-06-19T03:03:49Z Phase Conjugation via Four-Wave Mixing in a Resonant Medium Nilsen, Joseph Michael <p>This thesis describes the theoretical solution and experimental verification of phase conjugation via nondegenerate four-wave mixing in resonant media. The theoretical work models the resonant medium as a two-level atomic system with the lower state of the system being the ground state of the atom. Working initially with an ensemble of stationary atoms, the density matrix equations are solved by third-order perturbation theory in the presence of the four applied electro-magnetic fields which are assumed to be nearly resonant with the atomic transition. Two of the applied fields are assumed to be non-depleted counterpropagating pump waves while the third wave is an incident signal wave. The fourth wave is the phase conjugate wave which is generated by the interaction of the three previous waves with the nonlinear medium. The solution of the density matrix equations gives the local polarization of the atom. The polarization is used in Maxwell's equations as a source term to solve for the propagation and generation of the signal wave and phase conjugate wave through the nonlinear medium. Studying the dependence of the phase conjugate signal on the various parameters such as frequency, we show how an ultrahigh-Q isotropically sensitive optical filter can be constructed using the phase conjugation process.</p> <p>In many cases the pump waves may saturate the resonant medium so we also present another solution to the density matrix equations which is correct to all orders in the amplitude of the pump waves since the third-order solution is correct only to first-order in each of the field amplitudes. In the saturated regime, we predict several new phenomena associated with degenerate four-wave mixing and also describe the ac Stark effect and how it modifies the frequency response of the filtering process. We also show how a narrow bandwidth optical filter with an efficiency greater than unity can be constructed.</p> <p>In many atomic systems the atoms are moving at significant velocities such that the Doppler linewidth of the system is larger than the homogeneous linewidth. The latter linewidth dominates the response of the ensemble of stationary atoms. To better understand this case the density matrix equations are solved to third-order by perturbation theory for an atom of velocity v. The solution for the polarization is then integrated over the velocity distribution of the macroscopic system which is assumed to be a gaussian distribution of velocities since that is an excellent model of many real systems. Using the Doppler broadened system, we explain how a tunable optical filter can be constructed whose bandwidth is limited by the homogeneous linewidth of the atom while the tuning range of the filter extends over the entire Doppler profile.</p> <p>Since it is a resonant system, sodium vapor is used as the nonlinear medium in our experiments. The relevant properties of sodium are discussed in great detail. In particular, the wavefunctions of the 3S and 3P states are analyzed and a discussion of how the 3S-3P transition models a two-level system is given.</p> <p>Using sodium as the nonlinear medium we demonstrate an ultrahigh-Q optical filter using phase conjugation via nondegenerate four-wave mixing as the filtering process. The filter has a FWHM bandwidth of 41 MHz and a maximum efficiency of 4 x 10<sup>-3</sup>. However, our theoretical work and other experimental work with sodium suggest that an efficient filter with both gain and a narrower bandwidth should be quite feasible.</p> 1982 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/8081/1/Nilsen_jm_1982.pdf https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:02182014-143316560 Nilsen, Joseph Michael (1982) Phase Conjugation via Four-Wave Mixing in a Resonant Medium. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/RV9B-GV44. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:02182014-143316560 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:02182014-143316560> https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/8081/