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Dive into the research topics where Amy C. Turner is active.

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Featured researches published by Amy C. Turner.


Nature | 2006

Broad-band optical parametric gain on a silicon photonic chip

Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Turner; Jay E. Sharping; Bradley Schmidt; Michal Lipson; Alexander L. Gaeta

Developing an optical amplifier on silicon is essential for the success of silicon-on-insulator (SOI) photonic integrated circuits. Recently, optical gain with a 1-nm bandwidth was demonstrated using the Raman effect, which led to the demonstration of a Raman oscillator, lossless optical modulation and optically tunable slow light. A key strength of optical communications is the parallelism of information transfer and processing onto multiple wavelength channels. However, the relatively narrow Raman gain bandwidth only allows for amplification or generation of a single wavelength channel. If broad gain bandwidths were to be demonstrated on silicon, then an array of wavelength channels could be generated and processed, representing a critical advance for densely integrated photonic circuits. Here we demonstrate net on/off gain over a wavelength range of 28 nm through the optical process of phase-matched four-wave mixing in suitably designed SOI channel waveguides. We also demonstrate wavelength conversion in the range 1,511–1,591 nm with peak conversion efficiencies of +5.2 dB, which represents more than 20 times improvement on previous four-wave-mixing efficiencies in SOI waveguides. These advances allow for the implementation of dense wavelength division multiplexing in an all-silicon photonic integrated circuit. Additionally, all-optical delays, all-optical switches, optical signal regenerators and optical sources for quantum information technology, all demonstrated using four-wave mixing in silica fibres, can now be transferred to the SOI platform.


Optics Express | 2008

Nonlinear optics in photonic nanowires

Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Turner; Michal Lipson; Alexander L. Gaeta

We review recent research on nonlinear optical interactions in waveguides with sub-micron transverse dimensions, which are termed photonic nanowires. Such nanowaveguides, fabricated from glasses or semiconductors, provide the maximal confinement of light for index guiding structures enabling large enhancement of nonlinear interactions and group-velocity dispersion engineering. The combination of these two properties make photonic nanowires ideally suited for many nonlinear optical applications including the generation of single-cycle pulses and optical processing with sub-mW powers.


Optics Express | 2006

Tailored anomalous group-velocity dispersion in silicon channel waveguides.

Amy C. Turner; Christina Manolatou; Bradley Schmidt; Michal Lipson; Mark A. Foster; Jay E. Sharping; Alexander L. Gaeta

We present the first experimental demonstration of anomalous group-velocity dispersion (GVD) in silicon waveguides across the telecommunication bands. We show that the GVD in such waveguides can be tuned from -2000 to 1000 ps/(nm*km) by tailoring the cross-sectional size and shape of the waveguide.


Optics Express | 2007

Broad-band continuous-wave parametric wavelength conversion in silicon nanowaveguides

Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Turner; Reza Salem; Michal Lipson; Alexander L. Gaeta

We demonstrate highly broad-band frequency conversion via four-wave mixing in silicon nanowaveguides. Through appropriate engineering of the waveguide dimensions, conversion bandwidths greater than 150 nm are achieved and peak conversion efficiencies of -9.6 dB are demonstrated. Furthermore, utilizing fourth-order dispersion, wave-length conversion across four telecommunication bands from 1477 nm (S-band) to 1672 nm (U-band) is demonstrated with an efficiency of -12 dB.


Optics Express | 2006

Generation of correlated photons in nanoscale silicon waveguides

Jay E. Sharping; Kim Fook Lee; Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Turner; Bradley Schmidt; Michal Lipson; Alexander L. Gaeta; Prem Kumar

.We experimentally study the generation of correlated pairs of photons through four-wave mixing (FWM) in embedded silicon waveguides. The waveguides, which are designed to exhibit anomalous group-velocity dispersion at wavelengths near 1555 nm, allow phase matched FWM and thus efficient pair-wise generation of non-degenerate signal and idler photons. Photon counting measurements yield a coincidence-to-accidental ratio (CAR) of around 25 for a signal (idler) photon production rate of about 0.05 per pulse. We characterize the variation in CAR as a function of pump power and pump-to-sideband wavelength detuning. These measurements represent a first step towards the development of tools for quantum information processing which are based on CMOS-compatible, silicon-on-insulator technology.


Optics Express | 2008

Ultra-low power parametric frequency conversion in a silicon microring resonator

Amy C. Turner; Mark A. Foster; Alexander L. Gaeta; Michal Lipson

We demonstrate parametric wavelength conversion via four-wave mixing using ultra-low peak pump powers of a few milliwatts in a micrometer-scale silicon device. The response time of our device is 100 ps allowing for implementation in high-bandwidth optical communications. At these ultra-low power levels and microscale sizes, it should be possible to realize hundreds of these devices operating simultaneously on a single chip.


Optics Letters | 2008

Optical time lens based on four-wave mixing on a silicon chip

Reza Salem; Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Turner; David F. Geraghty; Michal Lipson; Alexander L. Gaeta

We propose a new technique to realize an optical time lens for ultrafast temporal processing that is based on four-wave mixing in a silicon nanowaveguide. The demonstrated time lens produces more than 100 pi of phase shift, which is not readily achievable using electro-optic phase modulators. Using this method we demonstrate 20x magnification of a signal consisting of two 3 ps pulses, which allows for temporal measurements using a detector with a 20 GHz bandwidth. Our technique offers the capability of ultrafast temporal characterization and processing in a chip-scale device.


Optics Express | 2007

All-optical regeneration on a silicon chip.

Reza Salem; Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Turner; David F. Geraghty; Michal Lipson; Alexander L. Gaeta

We demonstrate optical 2R regeneration in an integrated silicon device consisting of an 8-mm-long nanowaveguide followed by a ring-resonator bandpass filter. The regeneration process is based on nonlinear spectral broadening in the waveguide and subsequent spectral filtering through the ring resonator. We measure the nonlinear power transfer function for the device and find an operating peak power of 6 W. Measurements indicate that the output pulse width is determined only by the bandwidth of the bandpass filter. Numerical modeling of the nonlinear process including free-carrier effects shows that this device can be used for all-optical regeneration at telecommunication data rates.


Applied Physics Letters | 2006

Luminescence dynamics and waveguide applications of europium doped gallium nitride powder

Carl B. Poitras; Huaqiang Wu; Amy C. Turner; Michael G. Spencer; Michal Lipson

The authors present time resolved photoluminescence studies of the 621nm emission of Eu doped GaN in the form of a powder. The authors also show light guiding on chip using SiON waveguides in conjunction with the GaN powder. The Eu luminescence shows two distinct temperature dependent behaviors of the lifetime when excited above the GaN band gap, one at 185K and one at 104K, with corresponding activation energies of 16 and 9meV, respectively.


optical fiber communication conference | 2008

Low-power optical regeneration using four-wave mixing in a silicon chip

Reza Salem; Mark A. Foster; David F. Geraghty; Alexander L. Gaeta; Amy C. Turner; Michal Lipson

We demonstrate all-optical signal regeneration using four-wave mixing in a silicon nanowaveguide. Extinction ratio improvement, dispersive broadening compensation and timing-jitter reduction are demonstrated at low input signal powers.

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Mark A. Foster

Johns Hopkins University

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Kim Fook Lee

Northwestern University

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Prem Kumar

Northwestern University

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