Author/Authors :
Shih-Tun Chen; Chatterjee، نويسنده , , M.R.، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
In this paper, we examine some of the fundamental
properties of Bragg and Kaman-Nath diffraction of light by
ultrasonic waves by revisiting the well-known multiple plane
wave scattering theory developed by Korpel and Poon in 1980.
The purpose is to provide a clear and unambiguous insight into
the variety of physical and geometrical configurations associated
with the process of optical diffraction from Bragg and Kaman-
Nath ultrasonic cells, treating each domain separately. Despite
well-established theoretical models, there is a tendency to sometimes
erroneously associate general Bragg domain diffraction (as
opposed to exact Bragg diffraction where the incident angle is
Bragg-matched and the interaction width is infinite) with only
two diffracted orders that vary sinusoidally with peak phase
shift of the light and distance of propagation. In numerical
analyses of the coupled equations, there is also a tendency to
sometimes limit the number of orders to a few lower ones.
With the enthusiasm to arrive at a solution, this truncation is
sometimes applied in the Raman-Nath regime as well. In doing
so, higher Raman-Nath-scattered orders are implicitly assumed
to be progressively weaker and, therefore, negligible. In complex
acoustooptic systems, such approximations can lead to serious
errors. With an aim toward rectifying these and other common
misconceptions, a thorough numerical analysis of uniform plane
wave acoustooptic diffraction in the two well-known regimes is
presented and the limits of such analysis are examined.