|
SPECIAL
EECS Seminar*
3-4 pm, Grier Rm: 36-401A
(Refreshments at
2:45)
Ultra-high-Q
Optical Microcavities
Tobias
Kippenberg, PhD
Optical
micro-cavities confine light within dielectric volumes and
are important in a variety of fields such as cavity Quantum
Electrodynamics (cQED), photonics, bio-chemical sensing, and
nonlinear optics. The optical trajectories occur near the
interface of the dielectric cavity volume making them highly
sensitive to the interface quality. With a nearly atomic scale
surface roughness, surface-tension-induced microcavities such
as liquid microdroplets or silica microspheres are superior
to all other dielectric microresonators (e.g., photonic crystal
defect cavities, micro-posts or microdisks (resonators) when
their photon lifetime or the equivalent
quality factor (Q) is compared.
Dr.
Kippenberg will present recent advances in demonstrating an
ultra-high-Q microcavity on a silicon chip. The whispering
gallery modes (WGM) of these microcavities can be accessed
using tapered optical fibers, which allow highly efficient
coupling both to and from the WGM. The resulting high field
intensity within these structures allows accessing the regime
where nonlinear optical processes can be observed. In particular,
stimulated Raman scattering, optical parametric oscillation
and radiation pressure driven mechanical oscillations will
be discussed. He will conclude the presentation with an outlook
on rare-earth and silicon nanocrystal doping of toroid microcavities.
|