Hardware-neutral tools for the exploration of optical phenomena in near-resonant atomic systems

Author(s):  
Nuno A. Silva ◽  
Tiago Ferreira ◽  
Ariel Guerreiro

In the last three decades, a lot of research has been devoted to the optical response of an atomic media in near-to-resonant conditions and to how nonlinear optical properties are enhanced in these systems. However, as current research turns its attention towards multi-level and multidimensional systems interacting with several electromagnetic fields, the ever-increasing complexity of these problems makes it difficult to treat the semiclassical model of the Maxwell–Bloch equations analytically without any strongly-limiting approximations. Thus, numerical methods and particularly robust and fast computational tools, capable of addressing such class of modern and future problems in photonics, are mandatory. In this paper, we describe the development and implementation of a Maxwell–Bloch numerical solver that exploits the massive parallelism of the GPUs to tackle efficiently problems in multidimensional settings or featuring Doppler broadening effects. This constitutes a simulation tool that is capable of addressing a vast class of problems with considerable reduction of simulation time, featuring speedups up to 15 compared with the same codes running on a CPU.

2011 ◽  
Vol 284 (24) ◽  
pp. 5697-5701 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lida Zhang ◽  
Fengxue Zhou ◽  
Yueping Niu ◽  
Jingtao Zhang ◽  
Shangqing Gong

2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (S305) ◽  
pp. 136-145
Author(s):  
Jan Olof Stenflo

AbstractThe extensive literature on the physics of polarized scattering may give the impression that we have a solid theoretical foundation for the interpretation of spectro-polarimetric data. This theoretical framework has however not been sufficiently tested by experiments under controlled conditions. While the solar atmosphere may be viewed as a physics laboratory, the observed solar polarization depends on too many environmental factors that are beyond our control. The existence of a symmetric polarization peak at the center of the solar Na D1 line has remained an enigma for two decades, in spite of persistent efforts to explain it with available quantum theory. A decade ago a laboratory experiment was set up to determine whether this was a problem for solar physics or quantum physics. The experiment revealed a rich polarization structure of D1 scattering, although available quantum theory predicted null results. It has now finally been possible to formulate a well-defined and self-consistent extension of the theory of quantum scattering that can reproduce in great quantitative detail the main polarization structures that were found in the laboratory experiment. Here we give a brief overview of the new physical ingredients that were missing before. The extended theory reveals that multi-level atomic systems have a far richer coherence structure than previously believed.


2011 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 044208
Author(s):  
Yu-Xin Fu ◽  
Jin-Yan Zhao ◽  
Yue Song ◽  
Guo-Xian Dai ◽  
Shu-Li Huo ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Shukui Liu ◽  
Apostolos Papanikolaou ◽  
Peiyuan Feng ◽  
Sheming Fan

Abstract In this paper, we present a multi-level fidelity approach and associated computational tools for the prediction of the added resistance of various types of ships in waves. Employed methods include a fully empirical formula, a semi-empirical asymptotic formula, a potential flow, 3D panel method and a CFD code. Each of them requires a different level of detail for the hull form and this enables the application to various practical scenarios. The developed software tools are here validated against recently obtained model experiments data from MARIC. Developed tools are now integrated in the design software platform of MARIC and are used in the optimisation of ship design.


2009 ◽  
Vol 87 (7) ◽  
pp. 843-850 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andal Narayanan ◽  
Archana Sharma ◽  
T. M. Preethi ◽  
H. Abheera ◽  
Hema Ramachandran

Multi-level gaseous atomic systems showing electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) phenomenon also exhibit low light intensity nonlinear optical phenomena. This is primarily due to the supression of linear susceptibility for the probe light during EIT. Therefore under EIT, nonlinear interactions become appreciable even at very low light intensities. In particular, Kerr nonlinearity in N systems irradiated by three fields has been both experimentally and theoretically investigated. In this paper, we report an all optical observation of an absorptive three-photon resonance feature, of subnatural width, in a N level scheme of gaseous rubidium, at room temperature, in a novel geometry of three independent beams. The non-Doppler free configuration of the beam in which the absorption is seen is the first such feature reported in a beam that is not directly taking part in the transparency effect. We have demonstrated the velocity selective nature of this absorption and studied the contrast dependence on detuning from the fourth level. Density matrix calculations have been carried out for this geometry, the results of which are in qualitative agreement with the experiment.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1000 ◽  
pp. 012127
Author(s):  
Jianping Hu ◽  
Subhankar Roy ◽  
M Ummal Momeen

Electronics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (16) ◽  
pp. 1994
Author(s):  
Shirin Noei ◽  
Mohammadreza Parvizimosaed ◽  
Mohammadreza Noei

The Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) defines six levels of driving automation, ranging from Level 0 to Level 5. Automated driving systems perform entire dynamic driving tasks for Levels 3–5 automated vehicles. Delegating dynamic driving tasks from driver to automated driving systems can eliminate crashes attributed to driver errors. Sharing status, sharing intent, seeking agreement, or sharing prescriptive information between road users and vehicles dedicated to automated driving systems can further enhance dynamic driving task performance, safety, and traffic operations. Extensive simulation is required to reduce operating costs and achieve an acceptable risk level before testing cooperative automated driving systems in laboratory environments, test tracks, or public roads. Cooperative automated driving systems can be simulated using a vehicle dynamics simulation tool (e.g., CarMaker and CarSim) or a traffic microsimulation tool (e.g., Vissim and Aimsun). Vehicle dynamics simulation tools are mainly used for verification and validation purposes on a small scale, while traffic microsimulation tools are mainly used for verification purposes on a large scale. Vehicle dynamics simulation tools can simulate longitudinal, lateral, and vertical dynamics for only a few vehicles in each scenario (e.g., up to ten vehicles in CarMaker and up to twenty vehicles in CarSim). Conventional traffic microsimulation tools can simulate vehicle-following, lane-changing, and gap-acceptance behaviors for many vehicles in each scenario without simulating vehicle powertrain. Vehicle dynamics simulation tools are more compute-intensive but more accurate than traffic microsimulation tools. Due to software architecture or computing power limitations, simplifying assumptions underlying convectional traffic microsimulation tools may have been a necessary compromise long ago. There is, therefore, a need for a simulation tool to optimize computational complexity and accuracy to simulate many vehicles in each scenario with reasonable accuracy. This research proposes a traffic microsimulation tool that employs a simplified vehicle powertrain model and a model-based fault detection method to simulate many vehicles with reasonable accuracy at each simulation time step under noise and unknown inputs. Our traffic microsimulation tool considers driver characteristics, vehicle model, grade, pavement conditions, operating mode, vehicle-to-vehicle communication vulnerabilities, and traffic conditions to estimate longitudinal control variables with reasonable accuracy at each simulation time step for many conventional vehicles, vehicles dedicated to automated driving systems, and vehicles equipped with cooperative automated driving systems. Proposed vehicle-following model and longitudinal control functions are verified for fourteen vehicle models, operating in manual, automated, and cooperative automated modes over two driving schedules under three malicious fault magnitudes on transmitted accelerations.


2004 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Hanreich ◽  
M. Mayer ◽  
M. Mündlein ◽  
J. Nicolics

The lower thermal conductivity of gallium arsenide (GaAs) compared to silicon (Si) requires a careful thermal design for optimizing device performance and reliability. In this paper a recently developed thermal simulation tool (TRESCOM II) is applied for investigating the thermal behavior of a heterojunction GaAs power field effect transistor (FET). Main features of the simulation tool are an easy model creation procedure and an efficient numerical solver. Moreover, the tool allows to consider temperature dependent material properties and temperature dependent boundary conditions. The investigation of the thermal behavior of the power transistor has two goals. First goal is to establish the temperature distribution within the active layer of the FET to allow predictions of thermal-electrical interactions. A deeper insight into thermal-electrical interaction will lead to better equivalent circuit models used in electrical circuit design. Due to the fact that reliability of the component is mainly determined by thermal load and induced thermomechanical stress, second goal of this work is to investigate the influence of chip thickness and die bonding variations on the thermal behavior. Thermal response on different power levels is investigated and the influence of chip thickness tolerances and die bonding on the thermal performance of the device is discussed.


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