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

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Featured researches published by Amy C. Turner-Foster.


Nature | 2008

Silicon-chip-based ultrafast optical oscilloscope

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

With the realization of faster telecommunication data rates and an expanding interest in ultrafast chemical and physical phenomena, it has become important to develop techniques that enable simple measurements of optical waveforms with subpicosecond resolution. State-of-the-art oscilloscopes with high-speed photodetectors provide single-shot waveform measurement with 30-ps resolution. Although multiple-shot sampling techniques can achieve few-picosecond resolution, single-shot measurements are necessary to analyse events that are rapidly varying in time, asynchronous, or may occur only once. Further improvements in single-shot resolution are challenging, owing to microelectronic bandwidth limitations. To overcome these limitations, researchers have looked towards all-optical techniques because of the large processing bandwidths that photonics allow. This has generated an explosion of interest in the integration of photonics on standard electronics platforms, which has spawned the field of silicon photonics and promises to enable the next generation of computer processing units and advances in high-bandwidth communications. For the success of silicon photonics in these areas, on-chip optical signal-processing for optical performance monitoring will prove critical. Beyond next-generation communications, silicon-compatible ultrafast metrology would be of great utility to many fundamental research fields, as evident from the scientific impact that ultrafast measurement techniques continue to make. Here, using time-to-frequency conversion via the nonlinear process of four-wave mixing on a silicon chip, we demonstrate a waveform measurement technology within a silicon-photonic platform. We measure optical waveforms with 220-fs resolution over lengths greater than 100u2009ps, which represent the largest record-length-to-resolution ratio (>450) of any single-shot-capable picosecond waveform measurement technique. Our implementation allows for single-shot measurements and uses only highly developed electronic and optical materials of complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS)-compatible silicon-on-insulator technology and single-mode optical fibre. The mature silicon-on-insulator platform and the ability to integrate electronics with these CMOS-compatible photonics offer great promise to extend this technology into commonplace bench-top and chip-scale instruments.


Optics Express | 2010

Ultrashort free-carrier lifetime in low-loss silicon nanowaveguides

Amy C. Turner-Foster; Mark A. Foster; Jacob S. Levy; Carl B. Poitras; Reza Salem; Alexander L. Gaeta; Michal Lipson

We demonstrate reduction of the free-carrier lifetime in a silicon nanowaveguide from 3 ns to 12.2 ps by applying a reverse bias across an integrated p-i-n diode. This observation represents the shortest free-carrier lifetime demonstrated to date in silicon waveguides. Importantly, the presence of the p-i-n structure does not measurably increase the propagation loss of the waveguide. We derive a figure of merit demonstrating equal dependency of the nonlinear phase shift on free-carrier lifetime and linear propagation loss.


Optics Express | 2010

Frequency conversion over two-thirds of an octave in silicon nanowaveguides

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

We demonstrate ultrabroad-bandwidth low-power frequency conversion of continuous-wave light in a dispersion engineered silicon nanowaveguide via four-wave mixing. Our process produces continuously tunable four-wave mixing wavelength conversion over two-thirds of an octave from 1241-nm to 2078-nm wavelength light with a pump wavelength in the telecommunications C-band.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2009

Demonstration of Broadband Wavelength Conversion at 40 Gb/s in Silicon Waveguides

Benjamin G. Lee; Aleksandr Biberman; Amy C. Turner-Foster; Mark A. Foster; Michal Lipson; Alexander L. Gaeta; Keren Bergman

We present ultra-broadband wavelength conversion in silicon photonic waveguides at a data rate of 40 Gb/s. The dispersion-engineered device demonstrates a conversion bandwidth spanning the entire S-, C-, and L-bands of the ITU grid. Using a continuous-wave C-band pump, an input signal of wavelength 1513.7 nm is up-converted across nearly 50 nm at a data rate of 40 Gb/s, and bit-error-rate measurements are performed on the converted signal.


Optics Express | 2010

Wavelength multicasting in silicon photonic nanowires

Aleksandr Biberman; Benjamin G. Lee; Amy C. Turner-Foster; Mark A. Foster; Michal Lipson; Alexander L. Gaeta; Keren Bergman

We demonstrate a scalable, energy-efficient, and pragmatic method for high-bandwidth wavelength multicasting using FWM in silicon photonic nanowires. We experimentally validate up to a sixteen-way multicast of 40-Gb/s NRZ data using spectral and temporal responses, and evaluate the resulting data integrity degradation using BER measurements and power penalty performance metrics. We further examine the impact of this wavelength multicasting scalability on conversion efficiency. Finally, we experimentally evaluate up to a three-way multicast of 160-Gb/s pulsed-RZ data using spectral and temporal responses, representing the first on-chip wavelength multicasting of pulsed-RZ data.


Optics Express | 2009

High-speed optical sampling using a silicon-chip temporal magnifier

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

We demonstrate a single-shot technique for optical sampling based on temporal magnification using a silicon-chip time lens. We demonstrate the largest reported temporal magnification factor yet achieved (>500) and apply this technique to perform 1.3 TS/s single-shot sampling of ultrafast waveforms and to 80-Gb/s performance monitoring. This scheme offers the potential of developing a device that can transform GHz oscilloscopes into instruments capable of measuring signals with THz bandwidths.


Optics Letters | 2011

Continuous-wave mid-infrared frequency conversion in silicon nanowaveguides

Ryan K. W. Lau; Michael Menard; Yoshitomo Okawachi; Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Turner-Foster; Reza Salem; Michal Lipson; Alexander L. Gaeta

We report continuous-wave wavelength conversion from the telecom band to the mid-infrared via four-wave mixing in silicon nanowaveguides. We convert a 1636-nm signal to produce a 2384-nm idler, demonstrating a parametric bandwidth of 748 nm.


Optics Express | 2008

Large tunable delays using parametric mixing and phase conjugation in Si nanowaveguides

Yoshitomo Okawachi; Mark A. Foster; Xianpei Chen; Amy C. Turner-Foster; Reza Salem; Michal Lipson; Chris Xu; Alexander L. Gaeta

We demonstrate a technique for generating large, all-optical delays while simultaneously minimizing pulse distortion by using temporal phase conjugation via four-wave mixing in Si nanowaveguides. Using this scheme, we achieve continuously tunable delays over a range of 243 ns for 10 Gb/s NRZ data.


Optics Express | 2009

High-resolution spectroscopy using a frequency magnifier

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

We experimentally demonstrate a spectral magnifier using an imaging system with two time-lenses based on four-wave mixing in a Si nanowaveguide. We achieve a magnification factor of 105 with a frequency resolution of 1 GHz. The system offers potential as a tool for single-shot, high resolution spectral measurements.


Optics Express | 2009

Spectral phase conjugation via temporal imaging

Onur Kuzucu; Yoshitomo Okawachi; Reza Salem; Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Turner-Foster; Michal Lipson; Alexander L. Gaeta

We experimentally demonstrate wavelength-preserving spectral phase conjugation for compensating chromatic dispersion and self-phase modulation in optical fibers. Our implementation is based on a temporal imaging scheme that uses time lenses realized by broadband four-wave mixing in silicon waveguides. By constructing a temporal analog of a 4-f imaging system, we compensate for pulse distortions arising from second- and third-order dispersion and self-phase modulation in optical fibers.

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Mark A. Foster

Johns Hopkins University

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