An Erbium-Doped 1-D Fiber-Bragg Grating and Its Effect Upon Er3+ Radiative Spontaneous Emission

Spontaneous atomic emission is not a process of the isolated atom but rather a cooperative effect of the atom and the vacuum field. It is now well established that spontaneous radiative decay rates can be enhanced or suppressed through the effect of cavities comprising various types of discrete, ref...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Boggs, Bryan
Other Authors: Wang, Hailin
Language:en_US
Published: University of Oregon 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1794/12949
id ndltd-uoregon.edu-oai-scholarsbank.uoregon.edu-1794-12949
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-uoregon.edu-oai-scholarsbank.uoregon.edu-1794-129492018-12-20T05:48:06Z An Erbium-Doped 1-D Fiber-Bragg Grating and Its Effect Upon Er3+ Radiative Spontaneous Emission Boggs, Bryan Wang, Hailin Cavity Erbium Fluorescence Lifetime Spontaneous atomic emission is not a process of the isolated atom but rather a cooperative effect of the atom and the vacuum field. It is now well established that spontaneous radiative decay rates can be enhanced or suppressed through the effect of cavities comprising various types of discrete, reflective-mirror type, boundaries. The cavity effect is generally understood in terms of a cavity-induced modification of the vacuum spectral energy density. Recently, interest has grown in the possibility that systems characterized by distributed periodic boundary conditions, such as a spatially varying index of refraction, might be effective in controlling radiative atomic processes. A semi-classical theory is given that enables an estimate of the size of the lifetime modification of a two-level radiator contained within a three-dimensionally incomplete photonic bandgap structure called a fiber-Bragg grating. Following this is an exploration of a specific system and its effect upon radiative spontaneous emission. It is found through fluorescence line narrowing and frequency hole burning measurements that the observation of lifetime modification of the specific system is complicated due to intra and inter Stark energy migration. A lifetime modification measurement then shows that no change in lifetime is observed beyond the error bars on the measurement results. The tuning and coherence properties of a short-external-cavity diode laser that may be useful for future time-dependent spectroscopic measurements are examined using a fiber-based, self-heterodyne technique. Coherence properties during active frequency scans are characterized through analysis of time-dependent heterodyne beat signals at the output of a fiber interferometer. 2013-07-11T19:57:38Z 2013-07-11T19:57:38Z 2013-07-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/1794/12949 en_US All Rights Reserved. University of Oregon
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Cavity
Erbium
Fluorescence
Lifetime
spellingShingle Cavity
Erbium
Fluorescence
Lifetime
Boggs, Bryan
An Erbium-Doped 1-D Fiber-Bragg Grating and Its Effect Upon Er3+ Radiative Spontaneous Emission
description Spontaneous atomic emission is not a process of the isolated atom but rather a cooperative effect of the atom and the vacuum field. It is now well established that spontaneous radiative decay rates can be enhanced or suppressed through the effect of cavities comprising various types of discrete, reflective-mirror type, boundaries. The cavity effect is generally understood in terms of a cavity-induced modification of the vacuum spectral energy density. Recently, interest has grown in the possibility that systems characterized by distributed periodic boundary conditions, such as a spatially varying index of refraction, might be effective in controlling radiative atomic processes. A semi-classical theory is given that enables an estimate of the size of the lifetime modification of a two-level radiator contained within a three-dimensionally incomplete photonic bandgap structure called a fiber-Bragg grating. Following this is an exploration of a specific system and its effect upon radiative spontaneous emission. It is found through fluorescence line narrowing and frequency hole burning measurements that the observation of lifetime modification of the specific system is complicated due to intra and inter Stark energy migration. A lifetime modification measurement then shows that no change in lifetime is observed beyond the error bars on the measurement results. The tuning and coherence properties of a short-external-cavity diode laser that may be useful for future time-dependent spectroscopic measurements are examined using a fiber-based, self-heterodyne technique. Coherence properties during active frequency scans are characterized through analysis of time-dependent heterodyne beat signals at the output of a fiber interferometer.
author2 Wang, Hailin
author_facet Wang, Hailin
Boggs, Bryan
author Boggs, Bryan
author_sort Boggs, Bryan
title An Erbium-Doped 1-D Fiber-Bragg Grating and Its Effect Upon Er3+ Radiative Spontaneous Emission
title_short An Erbium-Doped 1-D Fiber-Bragg Grating and Its Effect Upon Er3+ Radiative Spontaneous Emission
title_full An Erbium-Doped 1-D Fiber-Bragg Grating and Its Effect Upon Er3+ Radiative Spontaneous Emission
title_fullStr An Erbium-Doped 1-D Fiber-Bragg Grating and Its Effect Upon Er3+ Radiative Spontaneous Emission
title_full_unstemmed An Erbium-Doped 1-D Fiber-Bragg Grating and Its Effect Upon Er3+ Radiative Spontaneous Emission
title_sort erbium-doped 1-d fiber-bragg grating and its effect upon er3+ radiative spontaneous emission
publisher University of Oregon
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1794/12949
work_keys_str_mv AT boggsbryan anerbiumdoped1dfiberbragggratinganditseffectuponer3radiativespontaneousemission
AT boggsbryan erbiumdoped1dfiberbragggratinganditseffectuponer3radiativespontaneousemission
_version_ 1718803998100684800