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Photonics/Optics Feature

The birth of attotechnology?

Nov. 20, 2007

Using a special hollow-core photonic crystal fiber, a team at the University of Bath, UK, has opened the door to what could prove to be a new sub-branch of photonics, the science of light guidance and trapping.

The team, led by Dr Fetah Benabid, reports on the discovery, which relates to the emerging attotechnology, the ability to send out pulses of light that last only an attosecond, a billion billionth of a second.

These pulses are so brief that they allow researchers to more accurately measure the movement of sub-atomic particles such as the electron, the tiny negatively-charged entity which moves outside the nucleus of an atom. Attosecond technology may throw light, literally, upon the strange quantum world where such particles have no definite position, only probable locations.

To make attosecond pulses, researchers create a broad spectrum of light from visible wavelengths to x-rays through an inert gas. This normally requires a gigawatt of power, which puts the technique beyond any commercial or industrial use.

But Benabid’s team used a photonic crystal fibre (PCF), the width of a human hair, which traps light and the gas together in an efficient way. Until now the spectrum produced by photonic crystal fibre has been too narrow for use in attosecond technology, but the team have now produced a broad spectrum, using what is called a Kagomé lattice, using about a millionth of the power used by non-PCF methods.

“This new way of using photonic crystal fiber has meant that the goal of attosecond technology is much closer," says Benabid, of the University of Bath’s Department of Physics, who worked with students Francois Couny and Phil Light, and with John Roberts of the Technical University of Denmark and Michael Raymer of the University of Oregon.

“The greatly reduced cost and size of producing these phenomenally short and powerful pulses makes exploring matter at an even smaller detail a realistic prospect,” says Benabid.

His team has made an important step in both applied physics and the theory of photonics. The effectiveness of photonic crystal fiber has lain so far in its exploitation of what is called photonic bandgap, which stops photons of light from “existing” in the fiber cladding and enabled them to be trapped in the inside core of the fiber.

Instead, the team makes use of the fact that light can exist in different ‘modes’ without strongly interacting. This creates a situation whereby light can be trapped inside the fiber core without the need of photonic bandgap. Physicists call these modes bound states within a continuum. The existence of these bound states between photons was predicted at the beginning of quantum mechanics in the 1930s, but this is the first time it has been noted in reality, and marks a theoretical breakthrough.

SOURCE: University of Bath, UK


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