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Fun with 'WHISPERING GALLERY' MICROLASERS with COMSOL
Posted Dec 16, 2010, 3:11 p.m. EST RF & Microwave Engineering Version 4.1 7 Replies
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Hello
I wanted to share a simple and rapidly built model, inspired (but in no way claiming to be a thourough study of the main subject) by the article I found this morning in the Photnics news, and later in NTB:
www.seas.harvard.edu/news-events/press-releases/harvard-scientists-demonstrate-highly-unidirectional-201cwhispering-gallery201d-microlasers
So I built rapidly a small elliptic disc, set an arbitrary size, index of refraction and wavelength etc, made a notch and run a few modal and frequency sweep studies.
The most impressive one is to scan over a large frequency range, using the notch as source, with a small frequency step and see how rapidly the boundary whixper modes appear and disapear. I find it inspirating to look at such images, you get a feeling of how modes build up.
One can further set an eletric conductor on one half side of the ellipse as reflector and get surface modes and buildup two symmetric sources at the end of the conduction region that again shapes differently the modes
you need RF but a 2Gb computer should do I modelled just one half to make it lighter
the png image is the total electric energy inside the cavity versus wavelength, some of the whisper modes show up, one in particular around 1.65 (with reflector)
Note that there is far mor to be done to get to a full laser cavity mode, with gain and losses, that I leave to you out there, with COMSOL one can really do advanced physics today, in an easy and ludique way
--
Have fun Comsoling
Ivar
I wanted to share a simple and rapidly built model, inspired (but in no way claiming to be a thourough study of the main subject) by the article I found this morning in the Photnics news, and later in NTB:
www.seas.harvard.edu/news-events/press-releases/harvard-scientists-demonstrate-highly-unidirectional-201cwhispering-gallery201d-microlasers
So I built rapidly a small elliptic disc, set an arbitrary size, index of refraction and wavelength etc, made a notch and run a few modal and frequency sweep studies.
The most impressive one is to scan over a large frequency range, using the notch as source, with a small frequency step and see how rapidly the boundary whixper modes appear and disapear. I find it inspirating to look at such images, you get a feeling of how modes build up.
One can further set an eletric conductor on one half side of the ellipse as reflector and get surface modes and buildup two symmetric sources at the end of the conduction region that again shapes differently the modes
you need RF but a 2Gb computer should do I modelled just one half to make it lighter
the png image is the total electric energy inside the cavity versus wavelength, some of the whisper modes show up, one in particular around 1.65 (with reflector)
Note that there is far mor to be done to get to a full laser cavity mode, with gain and losses, that I leave to you out there, with COMSOL one can really do advanced physics today, in an easy and ludique way
--
Have fun Comsoling
Ivar
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7 Replies Last Post Mar 27, 2011, 10:36 p.m. EDT