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11 - Photonic crystals, resonators, and cavity optomechanics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2012

Lukas Novotny
Affiliation:
University of Rochester, New York and ETH Zürich, Switzerland
Bert Hecht
Affiliation:
Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Germany
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Summary

Artificial optical materials and structures have enabled the observation of various new optical effects. For example, photonic crystals are able to inhibit the propagation of certain light frequencies and provide the unique ability to guide light around very tight bends and along narrow channels. With metamaterials, on the other hand, one can achieve negative refraction. The high field strengths in optical microresonators lead to nonlinear optical effects that are important for future integrated optical networks, and the coupling between optical and mechanical degrees of freedom opens up the possibility of cooling macroscopic systems down to the quantum ground state. This chapter explains the basic underlying principles of these novel optical structures.

Photonic crystals

Photonic crystals are materials with a spatial periodicity in their dielectric constant, a system that was first analyzed by Lord Rayleigh in 1887 [1]. Under certain conditions, photonic crystals can create a photonic bandgap, i.e. a frequency window within which propagation of light through the crystal is inhibited. Light propagation in a photonic crystal is similar to the propagation of electrons and holes in a semiconductor. An electron passing through a semiconductor experiences a periodic potential due to the ordered atomic lattice. The interaction between the electron and the periodic potential results in the formation of energy bandgaps. It is not possible for the electron to pass through the crystal if its energy falls within the range of the bandgap.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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