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By adding a carefully designed amplification section in a passive resonator, but pumping it below the lasing threshold, ultra-stable high-power cavity solitons can be formed, effectively removing the important barrier of having to work in low-loss environments.
Indistinguishable photon pairs are generated via four-wave mixing in a two-dimensional array of ring resonators that exhibit topological edge states. They show tunable spectral−temporal correlations and robustness against fabrication disorders.
A single-photodetector spectrometer based on black phosphorus is demonstrated in the wavelength range from 2 to 9 μm. The footprint is 9 × 16 μm2. The spectrometer is free from bulky interferometers and gratings, and is electrically reconfigurable.
A 300 GHz signal is generated by the combination of a low-noise stimulated Brillouin scattering process, dissipative Kerr soliton comb and optical-to-electrical conversion. A phase noise of −100 dBc Hz−1 is achieved at a Fourier frequency of 10 kHz.
An on-chip, sub-optical-cycle sampling technique for measuring arbitrary electric fields of few-femtojoule near-infrared optical pulses in ambient conditions is demonstrated, offering an improvement of roughly six orders of magnitude in energy sensitivity compared with those previous works in the near-infrared.
Linear diffractive structures are by themselves passive systems but researchers here exploit the non-linearity of a photodetector to realize a reconfigurable diffractive ‘processing’ unit. High-speed image and video recognition is demonstrated.
An electron spin polarization of 90% is achieved in a non-magnetic nanostructure at room temperature without magnetic field. This is accomplished by remote spin filtering of InAs quantum-dot electrons via an adjacent tunnelling-coupled GaNAs spin filter.
A near-field imaging approach based on nonlinear wave mixing that can provide a detailed picture of evanescent waves in real time and with a single shot is demonstrated. Using only standard optical components, this approach will make near-field imaging much more affordable and accessible.
Submicrometre-sized InGaN-based light-emitting diodes are fabricated by tailored ion implantation. The devices are free from electrical leakage and show a luminance of 7,440 nit at 4.9 A cm−2 even at the line/space scale of 0.5/0.5 μm (= 8,500 ppi).
A stimulated-emission-depletion-based fluorescence localization and super-resolution microscopy concept that is capable of attaining a spatial resolution down at the size scale of the fluorophores themselves and a localization precision of 1–3 nm in standard deviation is reported.
A hard X-ray self-seeded X-ray free-electron laser at the Pohang Accelerator Laboratory provides X-ray pulses with peak brightness of 3.2 × 1035 photons s–1 mm–2 mrad–2 0.1%BW–1 at 9.7 keV and a very small shot-to-shot electron energy jitter of 0.012%.
Composites of fluorescent metal–organic framework nanocrystals in a polymer are exploited to create fast scintillators with a rise time of about 50 ps.
By using engineered gain and loss sections in a photonic crystal laser, pulses with a peak power of ~20 W and pulse width of ~35 ps have been experimentally demonstrated and even higher peak power operation (>300 W) has been theoretically predicted.
Two quantum repeater segments are connected via on-demand entanglement swapping by using two atomic quantum memories. The efficiency improves from a quadratic scaling to a linear one with the preparation efficiency of the atom–photon entanglement.
Using CMOS-ready ultra-high-Q microresonators, a highly coherent electrically pumped integrated laser with frequency noise of 0.2 Hz2 Hz−1, corresponding to a short-term linewidth of 1.2 Hz, is demonstrated. The device configuration is also found to relieve the dispersion requirements for microcomb generation that have limited certain nonlinear platforms.
An intensity-based holographic imaging via space-domain Kramers–Kronig relations is presented, allowing the phase image of an object to be obtained directly from a single intensity measurement with oblique illumination.