Mihai Ibanescu
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mihai Ibanescu.
Optics Letters | 2006
Ardavan Farjadpour; David Roundy; Alejandro W. Rodriguez; Mihai Ibanescu; Peter Bermel; John D. Joannopoulos; Steven G. Johnson; Geoffrey W. Burr
Finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) methods suffer from reduced accuracy when modeling discontinuous dielectric materials, due to the inhererent discretization (pixelization). We show that accuracy can be significantly improved by using a subpixel smoothing of the dielectric function, but only if the smoothing scheme is properly designed. We develop such a scheme based on a simple criterion taken from perturbation theory and compare it with other published FDTD smoothing methods. In addition to consistently achieving the smallest errors, our scheme is the only one that attains quadratic convergence with resolution for arbitrarily sloped interfaces. Finally, we discuss additional difficulties that arise for sharp dielectric corners.
Optics Express | 2001
Steven G. Johnson; Mihai Ibanescu; Maksim Skorobogatiy; Ori Weisberg; Torkel Engeness; Marin Soljacic; Steven A. Jacobs; John D. Joannopoulos; Yoel Fink
We present the light-propagation characteristics of OmniGuide fibers, which guide light by concentric multi-layer dielectric mirrors having the property of omnidirectional reflection. We show how the lowest-loss TE_01 mode can propagate in a single-mode fashion through even large-core fibers, with other modes eliminated asymptotically by their higher losses and poor coupling, analogous to hollow metallic microwave waveguides. Dispersion, radiation leakage, material absorption, nonlinearities, bending, acircularity, and interface roughness are considered with the help of leaky modes and perturbation theory, and both numerical results and general scaling relations are presented. We show that cladding properties such as absorption and nonlinearity are suppressed by many orders of magnitude due to the strong confinement in a hollow core, and other imperfections are tolerable, promising that the properties of silica fibers may be surpassed even when nominally poor materials are employed.
Optics Letters | 2005
Michelle L. Povinelli; Marko Loncar; Mihai Ibanescu; Elizabeth J. Smythe; Steven G. Johnson; Federico Capasso; John D. Joannopoulos
Forces arising from overlap between the guided waves of parallel, microphotonic waveguides are calculated. Both attractive and repulsive forces, determined by the choice of relative input phase, are found. Using realistic parameters for a silicon-on-insulator material system, we estimate that the forces are large enough to cause observable displacements. Our results illustrate the potential for a broader class of optically tunable microphotonic devices and microstructured artificial materials.
Optics Express | 2005
Michelle L. Povinelli; Steven G. Johnson; Marko Lonèar; Mihai Ibanescu; Elizabeth J. Smythe; Federico Capasso; John D. Joannopoulos
We have calculated the optically-induced force between coupled high-Q whispering gallery modes of microsphere resonators. Attractive and repulsive forces are found, depending whether the bi-sphere mode is symmetric or antisymmetric. The magnitude of the force is linearly proportional to the total power in the spheres and consequently linearly enhanced by Q. Forces on the order of 100 nN are found for Q=108, large enough to cause displacements in the range of 1mum when the sphere is attached to a fiber stem with spring constant 0.004 N/m.
Applied Physics Letters | 2004
Michelle L. Povinelli; Mihai Ibanescu; Steven G. Johnson; John D. Joannopoulos
We study the radiation pressure on the surface of a waveguide formed by omnidirectionally reflecting mirrors. In the absence of losses, the pressure goes to infinity as the distance between the mirrors is reduced to the cutoff separation of the waveguide mode. This divergence at constant power input is due to the reduction of the modal group velocity to zero, which results in the magnification of the electromagnetic field. Our structure suggests a promising alternative, microscale system for observing the variety of classical and quantum-optical effects associated with radiation pressure in Fabry–Perot cavities.
Physical Review Letters | 2007
Alejandro W. Rodriguez; Mihai Ibanescu; D. Iannuzzi; Federico Capasso; John D. Joannopoulos; Steven G. Johnson
We present a method of computing Casimir forces for arbitrary geometries, with any desired accuracy, that can directly exploit the efficiency of standard numerical-electromagnetism techniques. Using the simplest possible finite-difference implementation of this approach, we obtain both agreement with past results for cylinder-plate geometries, and also present results for new geometries. In particular, we examine a pistonlike problem involving two dielectric and metallic squares sliding between two metallic walls, in two and three dimensions, respectively, and demonstrate nonadditive and nonmonotonic changes in the force due to these lateral walls.
Optics Letters | 2005
Mihai Ibanescu; Steven G. Johnson; David Roundy; Yoel Fink; John D. Joannopoulos
We propose and demonstrate a mechanism for small-modal-volume high-Q cavities based on an anomalous uniform waveguide mode that has zero group velocity at a nonzero wave vector. In a short piece of a uniform waveguide with a specially designed cross section, light is confined longitudinally by small group-velocity propagation and transversely by a reflective cladding. The quality factor Q is greatly enhanced by the small group velocity for a set of cavity lengths that are separated by approximately pi/k0, where k0 is the longitudinal wave vector for which the group velocity is zero.
Optics Letters | 2003
Marin Soljacic; Mihai Ibanescu; Steven G. Johnson; John D. Joannopoulos; Yoel Fink
We demonstrate the feasibility of optical bistability in an axially modulated nonlinear OmniGuide fiber through analytical theory and detailed numerical experiments. At 1.55-microm carrier wavelength, the in-fiber devices that we propose can operate with only a few tens of milliwatts of power, can have a nearly instantaneous response and recovery time, and can be shorter than 100 microm.
Optics Express | 2009
Rafif E. Hamam; Mihai Ibanescu; Steven G. Johnson; John D. Joannopoulos; Marin Soljacic
We propose a two dimensional (2D) photonic crystal (PhC) structure that supports super-collimation over a large frequency range (over 4 times that of a traditional square lattice of holes). We theoretically and numerically investigate the collimation mechanism in our 2D structure, in comparison to that of two other frequently used related PhC structures. We also point out the potential importance of our proposed structure in the design of super-collimation-based devices for both monochromatic and polychromatic light.
Optics Letters | 2005
Alejandro W. Rodriguez; Mihai Ibanescu; John D. Joannopoulos; Steven G. Johnson
We demonstrate by finite-difference time-domain simulations in 2D and 3D that optical cavities in realistic finite photonic crystals have lifetimes and modal volumes that are essentially insensitive to disorder (of various types, including surface disorder and randomized positions), even with unphysically large disorder. A lifetime Q = 10(8) is demonstrated in a 3D single-mode cavity with a half-wavelength mode diameter using only eight vertical periods of a disordered crystal.