Title :
Electro-optic diffraction grating for light beam modulation and diffraction
Author :
Gordon, E.I. ; Cohen, M.G.
Author_Institution :
Bell Telephone Labs., Inc., Murry Hill, N.J.
fDate :
8/1/1965 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The interaction between a strong traveling microwave signal and an optical beam in an electro-optic material is described in the limit of very high microwave dielectric constant. The interaction produces effects analogous to those produced by a moving diffraction grating. When the optical beam is wider than the wavelength of the microwave signal, the first grating order is resolved from the zero-order or main beam. Under this condition two types of devices become possible: 1) a beam deflector which can position an optical maser beam on, for example, 105distinct points with negligible crosstalk and with address times of order 10-7s, 2) a baseband light intensity modulator which is founded on the fact that light deflected into the first-order beam by the microwave signal is removed from the main beam. The amount deflected into the first-order beam is proportional to the microwave power; the intensity modulation follows the microwave envelope. The power required for a given modulation depth is inversely proportional to the seven halfs power of the dielectric Constant. As an example, for a not unrealistic choice of dielectric constant of 104, complete transfer from the zero-order to the first-order beam requires 5 watts of microwave power. The interaction length is of order one centimeter and the interaction bandwidth is essentially unlimited. As a baseband modulator the maximum instantaneous bandwidth is of order 10 percent of the subcarrier frequency. Experimental verification is provided in an earlier paper [1].
Keywords :
Bandwidth; Baseband; Dielectric constant; Diffraction gratings; Electrooptic modulators; Intensity modulation; Microwave devices; Optical beams; Optical diffraction; Optical modulation;
Journal_Title :
Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JQE.1965.1072219