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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan C. Knight is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan C. Knight.


Optics Letters | 1997

Endlessly single-mode photonic crystal fiber

T. A. Birks; Jonathan C. Knight; Phillip St. J. Russell

We made an all-silica optical fiber by embedding a central core in a two-dimensional photonic crystal with a micrometer-spaced hexagonal array of air holes. An effective-index model confirms that such a fiber can be single mode for any wavelength. Its useful single-mode range within the transparency window of silica, although wide, is ultimately bounded by a bend-loss edge at short wavelengths as well as at long wavelengths.


Optics Letters | 2000

Highly birefringent photonic crystal fibers

A. Ortigosa-Blanch; Jonathan C. Knight; W.J. Wadsworth; J. Arriaga; Brian Joseph Mangan; T. A. Birks; P. St. J. Russell

We report a strongly anisotropic photonic crystal fiber. Twofold rotational symmetry was introduced into a single-mode fiber structure by creation of a regular array of airholes of two sizes disposed about a pure-silica core. Based on spectral measurements of the polarization mode beating, we estimate that the fiber has a beat length of approximately 0.4 mm at a wavelength of 1540 nm, in good agreement with the results of modeling.


Optics Letters | 1997

Phase-matched excitation of whispering-gallery-mode resonances by a fiber taper

Jonathan C. Knight; G. Cheung; F. Jacques; T. A. Birks

We show that high-Q whispering-gallery modes in fused-silica microspheres can be efficiently excited by an optical fiber taper. By adjusting the taper diameter to match the ropagation constant of the mode in the taper with that of the resonant mode of interest, one can couple more than 90% of the light into the sphere. This represents a significant improvement in excitation efficiency compared with other methods and is, we believe, the most efficient excitation of a high- Q microcavity resonance by a monomode optical fiber yet demonstrated.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2000

Anomalous dispersion in photonic crystal fiber

Jonathan C. Knight; J. Arriaga; T. A. Birks; A. Ortigosa-Blanch; W.J. Wadsworth; P. St. J. Russell

We describe the measured group-velocity dispersion characteristics of several air-silica photonic crystal fibers with anomalous group-velocity dispersion at visible and near-infrared wavelengths. The values measured over a broad spectral range are compared to those predicted for an isolated strand of silica surrounded by air. We demonstrate a strictly single-mode fiber which has zero dispersion at a wavelength of 700 mm. These fibers are significant for the generation of solitons and supercontinua using ultrashort pulse sources.


Optics Express | 2005

Ultimate low loss of hollow-core photonic crystal fibres

P.J. Roberts; Francois Couny; H. Sabert; Brian Joseph Mangan; David Philip Williams; L. Farr; Michelle Mason; A. Tomlinson; Timothy Adam Birks; Jonathan C. Knight; P. St. J. Russell

Hollow-core photonic crystal fibres have excited interest as potential ultra-low loss telecommunications fibres because light propagates mainly in air instead of solid glass. We propose that the ultimate limit to the attenuation of such fibres is determined by surface roughness due to frozenin capillary waves. This is confirmed by measurements of the surface roughness in a HC-PCF, the angular distribution of the power scattered out of the core, and the wavelength dependence of the minimum loss of fibres drawn to different scales.


Optics Letters | 2002

Submicrometer axial resolution optical coherence tomography.

Boris Povazay; Kostadinka Bizheva; Angelika Unterhuber; Boris Hermann; Harald Sattmann; Adolf Friedrich Fercher; Wolfgang Drexler; Alexander Apolonski; W.J. Wadsworth; Jonathan C. Knight; P. St. J. Russell; M. Vetterlein; E. Scherzer

Optical coherence tomography (OCT) with unprecedented submicrometer axial resolution achieved by use of a photonic crystal fiber in combination with a compact sub-10-fs Ti:sapphire laser (Femtolasers Produktions) is demonstrated for what the authors believe is the first time. The emission spectrum ranges from 550 to 950 nm (lambda(c)=725 nm , P(out)=27 mW) , resulting in a free-space axial OCT resolution of ~0.75 mum , corresponding to ~0.5 mum in biological tissue. Submicrometer-resolution OCT is demonstrated in vitro on human colorectal adenocarcinoma cells HT-29. This novel light source has great potential for development of spectroscopic OCT because its spectrum covers the absorption bands of several biological chromophores.


Optics Express | 2002

Demonstration of ultra-flattened dispersion in photonic crystal fibers

W.H. Reeves; Jonathan C. Knight; P. Russell; P. Roberts

We demonstrate photonic crystal fibers with ultra-flattened, near zero dispersion. Two micro-structured fibers showing dispersion of 0 +/- 0.6 ps/nm.km from 1.24 microm-1.44 microm wavelength and 0 +/- 1.2 ps/nm.km over 1 microm-1.6 microm wavelength have been measured.


Optics Express | 2004

Supercontinuum and four-wave mixing with Q-switched pulses in endlessly single-mode photonic crystal fibres.

William J. Wadsworth; Nicolas Y. Joly; Jonathan C. Knight; T. A. Birks; Fabio Biancalana; P. St. J. Russell

Photonic crystal fibres exhibiting endlessly single-mode operation and dispersion zero in the range 1040 to 1100 nm are demonstrated. A sub-ns pump source at 1064 nm generates a parametric output at 732 nm with an efficiency of 35%, or parametric gain of 55 dB at 1315 nm. A broad, flat supercontinuum extending from 500 nm to beyond 1750 nm is also demonstrated using the same pump source.


Nature | 2005

Compact, stable and efficient all-fibre gas cells using hollow-core photonic crystal fibres

F. Benabid; Francois Couny; Jonathan C. Knight; T. A. Birks; P. St. J. Russell

Gas-phase materials are used in a variety of laser-based applications—for example, in high-precision frequency measurement, quantum optics and nonlinear optics. Their full potential has however not been realized because of the lack of a suitable technology for creating gas cells that can guide light over long lengths in a single transverse mode while still offering a high level of integration in a practical and compact set-up or device. As a result, solid-phase materials are still often favoured, even when their performance compares unfavourably with gas-phase systems. Here we report the development of all-fibre gas cells that meet these challenges. Our structures are based on gas-filled hollow-core photonic crystal fibres, in which we have recently demonstrated substantially enhanced stimulated Raman scattering, and which exhibit high performance, excellent long-term pressure stability and ease of use. To illustrate the practical potential of these structures, we report two different devices: a hydrogen-filled cell for efficient generation of rotational Raman scattering using only quasi-continuous-wave laser pulses; and acetylene-filled cells, which we use for absolute frequency-locking of diode lasers with very high signal-to-noise ratios. The stable performance of these compact gas-phase devices could permit, for example, gas-phase laser devices incorporated in a ‘credit card’ or even in a laser pointer.


Optics Express | 2008

Over 4000 nm Bandwidth of Mid-IR Supercontinuum Generation in sub-centimeter Segments of Highly Nonlinear Tellurite PCFs

Peter Domachuk; N. A. Wolchover; Mark Cronin-Golomb; A. Wang; A. K. George; C.M.B. Cordeiro; Jonathan C. Knight; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto

We report broad bandwidth, mid-IR supercontinuum generation using a sub-cm (8 mm) length of highly nonlinear tellurite microstructured photonic crystal fiber (PCF). We pump the fiber at telecommunication wavelengths by using 1550 nm, 100 fs pulses of energy E=1.9 nJ. When coupled in the PCF, these pulses result in a supercontinuum (SC) bandwidth of 4080 nm extending from 789 to 4870 nm measured at 20 dBm below the peak spectral power. This bandwidth is comparable or in excess of previously reported spectra for other nonlinear glass fiber formulations despite the significantly shorter fiber length. In addition, besides offering a convenient pump wavelength, short fiber lengths enable smoother SC spectra, lower dispersion, and reduced material absorption at longer wavelengths making the use of this PCF particularly interesting.

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