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1.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 14576, 2019 Oct 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31601876

ABSTRACT

An all-optical computer has remained an elusive concept. To construct a practical computing primitive equivalent to an electronic Boolean logic, one should utilize nonlinearity that overcomes weaknesses that plague many optical processing schemes. An advantageous nonlinearity provides a complete set of logic operations and allows cascaded operations without changes in wavelength or in signal encoding format. Here we demonstrate an all-optical majority gate based on a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL). Using emulated signal coupling, the arrangement provides Bit Error Ratio (BER) of 10-6 at the rate of 1 GHz without changes in the wavelength or in the signal encoding format. Cascaded operation of the injection-locked laser majority gate is simulated on a full adder and a 3-bit ripple-carry adder circuits. Finally, utilizing the spin-flip model semiconductor laser rate equations, we prove that injection-locked lasers may perform normalization operations in the steady-state with an arbitrary linear state of polarization.

2.
Opt Express ; 19(26): B645-52, 2011 Dec 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22274083

ABSTRACT

Saturated Collision Amplifier (SCA) is a novel amplification scheme that uses SOA saturation in order to maximize the output power and minimize the ASE noise and the polarization sensitivity. We demonstrate the SCA reach extension in a commercial single-wavelength XGPON1 prototype system where bidirectional optical budget of up to 50 dB is obtained. The traffic performances are compared between the SCA and the conventional SOA extender. The novel extension scheme is demonstrated also for two- and four-wavelength 10 Gbit/s unidirectional downstream configurations with 45 km and 100 km transmission distances with 58-dB maximum total optical budget for each wavelength.

3.
Opt Express ; 12(7): 1363-71, 2004 Apr 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19474957

ABSTRACT

We present a new method for quantification of minute birefringence in high-finesse resonators. The method is based on observing the homodyne polarization mode beat at the output of the resonator. We show that the mode beat is generated by a phase mismatch of a polarization mode in the cavity and that the magnitude of the birefringence is proportional to the beat frequency. We demonstrate the sensitivity of the technique by measuring polarization properties of a twisted 0.275 m long single-mode fiber cavity. Maximum beat length of the fiber was found to be 10.6 m, which is almost 40 times longer than the length of the studied fiber.

4.
Appl Opt ; 41(18): 3567-75, 2002 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12078682

ABSTRACT

A novel measurement principle for fiber-optic sensing is presented. Use of a cavity-ring-down scheme enables measurements of minute optical losses in high-finesse fiber-optic cavities. The loss may be induced by evanescent-field absorption, fiber bending, fiber degradation, Bragg gratings, or any other effect that might change the fiber transmission or cavity reflector properties. The principle is proved to be rather insensitive to ambient perturbations such as temperature changes. A high-sensitivity measurement of loss due to bending is presented as a proof-of-principle. With a cavity finesse of 627 a sensitivity for induced loss of 108 ppm (4.68 x 10(-4) dB) is achieved. Preliminary measurements of evanescent-field absorption are also discussed.

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