Integrated optics is a far-reaching attempt to apply thin-film technology to optical circuits and devices, and, by using methods of integrated circuitry, to achieve a better and more economical optical system. The specific topics discussed here are physics of light waves in thin films, materials and losses involved, methods of couplings light beam into and out of a thin film, and nonlinear interactions in waveguide structures. The purpose of this paper is to review in some detail the important development of this new and fascinating field, and to caution the reader that the technology involved is difficult because of the smallness and perfection demanded by thin-film optical devices.
We report theory and experiment on modes of propagating light waves in deposited semiconductor films. The modes are excited by a novel prism-film coupler which is also used for the measurement of their phase velocities. Up to 50% of the incident laser energy has been fed into a single mode of propagation. The positions and linewidths of the modes, the wave intensity inside the film, and a dramatic view of the mode spectrum displayed by the scattered light are discussed in detail.
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