We examined the propagation of nonanalytical points encoded on temporally Gaussian-shaped optical pulses in fast and slow light in an optical ring resonator at λ = 1.5 μm. The temporal peak of the Gaussian pulse was either advanced or delayed, reflecting anomalous or normal dispersions in the ring resonator, relevant to under-or overcoupling conditions, respectively. The nonanalytical points were neither advanced nor delayed but appeared as they entered the ring resonator. The nonanalytical points could be interpreted as information; therefore, the experimental results suggested that information velocity is equal to the light velocity in vacuum or the background medium, independent of the group velocity. The transient behaviors at the leading and trailing edges of the nonanalytical points are discussed in terms of optical precursors.
Zinc sulfide (ZnS) and aluminum doped zinc sulfide (ZnS:Al) thin films have been prepared by chemical bath deposition onto glass substrates at 85 °C using non-toxic complexing agents by varying the Al concentration between 0 wt. % and 18 wt. %. The ZnS and ZnS:Al thin films exhibited a hexagonal wurtzite crystal structure and showed (008) preferential orientation. The Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscope (FESEM) images of the film showed that the glass substrate was nicely covered by compact and dense mosaic like nanostructures. The elemental composition of ZnS and ZnS:Al thin films was measured by energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) demonstrates the doping of Al into ZnS. From the XPS spectra, the binding energy (BE) values were observed to shift toward the lower BE side for increasing aluminum content. Raman spectra were obtained for the undoped and Al doped ZnS films, which exhibit first-order phonon modes at 328.33 cm−1 and 341.66 cm−1 for the A1/E1 longitudinal optical phonons, and the bands at 253.33 cm−1 and 263.33 cm−1 revealed longitudinal optical phonon–plasmon coupled modes. UV–visible spectrophotometric measurement showed that approximately 70%–80% transmission happened in the visible to near infrared region, with a direct allowed bandgap in the range of 3.52 eV–3.76 eV. A maximum transmittance of 80% was observed for 6 wt. % Al doped ZnS thin films, and the absorption edge shifted toward the blue spectrum region. ZnS and ZnS:Al thin films showed n-type electrical conductivity with carrier concentrations varying from 1.55 × 1017/cm3 to 3.13 × 1017/cm3. Resistivity of the ZnS:Al thin films was decreased with the increase in Al concentration.
We performed optical image propagation experiments in an image resonator consisting of a Fabry-Perot resonator in reflection geometry. Two-dimensional images encoded on optical pulses of 32ns were stored, and either advanced, -6.0ns, or delayed, 10.9ns, using the dispersion relation relevant to the image resonator, in the under- or over- coupling condition, respectively. The overall images are propagated through the resonator clearly, while the diffraction effects were analyzed both in real-space and in k-space.
We propagated transverse two-dimensional images encoded on optical pulses through a frequency window of a coupled-image-resonator-induced transparency. The optical images are stored and delayed by 10.6ns, reflecting the tunable dispersion of the coupled resonator. The k-space bandwidth of the amplitude transfer function of the system is discussed in the presence of the off-resonance Fano interference effect between the two resonators.
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