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We report an efficient mechanism to generate mechanical entanglement in a two-cascaded cavity optomechanical system with optical parametric amplifiers (OPAs) inside the two coupled cavities. We use the especially tuned OPAs to squeeze the hybrid mode composed of two mechanical modes, leading to strong macroscopic entanglement between the two movable mirrors. The squeezing parameter as well as the effective mechanical damping are both modulated by the OPA gains. The optimal degree of mechanical entanglement therefore depends on the balanced process between coherent hybrid mode squeezing and dissipation engineering. Cobimetinib in vivo The mechanical entanglement is robust to strong cavity decay, going beyond simply resolved sideband regime, and is resistant to reasonable high thermal noise. The scheme provides an alternative way for generating strong macroscopic entanglement in cascaded optomechanical systems.Metal films are often used in optoelectronic devices as mirrors and/or electrical contacts. In many such devices, however, the π-phase shift of the electric field that occurs upon reflection from a perfect electric conductor (for which a metal mirror is a reasonable approximation) is undesirable. This is because it results in the total electric field being zero at the mirror surface, which is unfavorable if one wishes for example to enhance absorption by a material placed there. This has motivated the development of structures that reflect light with zero phase shift, as these lead to the electric field having an anti-node (rather than node) at the surface. These structures have been denoted by a variety of terms, including magnetic mirrors, magnetic conductors, and high impedance surfaces. In this work, we experimentally demonstrate a long-wave infrared device that we term a magnetic mirror. It comprises an array of amorphous silicon cuboids on a gold film. Our measurements demonstrate a phase shift of zero and a high reflectance (of ∼90%) at a wavelength of 8.4 µm. We present the results of a multipole analysis that provides insight into the physical mechanism. Lastly, we investigate the use of our structure in a photodetector application by performing simulations of the optical absorption by monolayer graphene placed on the cuboids.A dual-parameter sensor based on a photonic crystal fiber (PCF) concatenated with a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) is proposed and experimentally demonstrated for simultaneous measurement of magnetic field and temperature. Novel magnetic fluids (MF) with different concentration and surfactant are filled in the air holes of PCF. The magnetic field measurement property is only determined by PCF, while the temperature is co-determined by PCF and FBG. Experimental results show that the wavelength shift has a good linearity corresponding with temperature and magnetic field. Temperature and magnetic field sensitivity are proportional to concentration of MF and are affected by different surfactants. For PCF point, when polyethylene glycol is used as a surfactant and the magnetic fluid concentration is equal to 0.15, the highest magnetic field sensitivity is up to 924.63 pm/mT. The proposed sensor has a high sensitivity as well as cross-sensitivity resistance, which provides a promising candidate for dual-channel filtering or multi-parameter measurement applications.The presence of a ship in water disturbs the ambient light field and propagates errors to radiometric measurements. This study investigated the ship perturbation via Monte Carlo simulations with a reflective 3D ship. It is found that the height of ship could cause significant perturbation. However, these perturbations could be compensated by the reflection of the ship's hull, where such compensations vary from sun angle to hull's reflectance. Further, as a rule of thumb, to keep the perturbation on water-leaving radiance under ∼3% from an operating ship, a look-up table is generated with the requirements of viewing angle for the radiometers operated at the deck and for the deployment distance of floating and profiling instruments.The interaction of non-monochromatic radiation with arrays comprising plasmonic and dielectric nanoparticles has been studied using the finite-difference time-domain electrodynamics method. It is shown that LiNbO3, TiO2, GaAs, Si, and Ge all-dielectric nanoparticle arrays can provide a complete selective reflection of an incident plane wave within a narrow spectral line of collective lattice resonance with a Q-factor of 103 or larger at various spectral ranges, while plasmonic refractory TiN and chemically stable Au nanoparticle arrays provide high-Q resonances with moderate reflectivity. Arrays with fixed dimensional parameters make it possible to fine-tune the position of a selected resonant spectral line by tilting the array relative to the direction of the incident radiation. These effects provide grounds for engineering novel selective tunable optical high-Q filters in a wide range of wavelengths, from visible to middle-IR.An effective experiment scheme is proposed to generate the terahertz (THz) perfect optical vortex (POV) beams by diffractive elements at the frequency of 0.1THz. Two diffractive elements are designed and fabricated by 3D-printing to form the generation system. The ring radius of the generated beams is independent of the topological charge and positive linear relationship with the radial wave vector. By controlling the radial wave vector, the ring radius can be freely adjusted. The experiment results are shown to corroborate the numerical simulation ones. Such generated beams hold promise for developing the novel THz fiber communication systems.The calibration and sampling of the multispectral Light Detection and Ranging (lidar) intensity is still challenging because the data acquisition has to be optimized for simultaneous 3D measurement, and the intensity retrieval methods need to be fast to enable real-time detection. We have studied the spectral measurement of low reflectance targets with an 8-channel hyperspectral lidar with improved waveform sampling and sensitivity, which now allow the detection of spectral differences even at low reflectance values. Our initial analysis resulted in a classification accuracy greater than 80%, which indicates that the multispectral lidar is able to detect the small differences in target spectral properties when reflectance at two or more channels is compared at the same time.Holes through silicon substrates are used in silicon microsystems, for example in vertical electrical interconnects. In comparison to deep reactive ion etching, laser drilling is a versatile method for forming these holes, but laser drilling suffers from poor hole quality. In this article, water is used in the silicon drilling process to remove debris and the shape deformations of the holes. Water is introduced into the drilling process through the backside of the substrate to minimize negative effects to the drilling process. Drilling of inclined holes is also demonstrated. The inclined holes could find applications in radio frequency devices.In this article, based on nonadiabatic molecular dynamics with electronic transitions, the elaborate ultrafast process of hot excitons in conjugated polymer solar cells is revealed. When an external optical beam/pulse with the intensity of 30 µJ/cm-2 is utilized to excite a conjugated polymer, just within only 50 fs, the electronic transition not only redistributes the electron population in the original molecular orbital, but also starts to localize the electron cloud of excited states and to distort the alternating bonds in the polymer chain. Up to 300 fs, the lattice distortion has been stabilized. During the formation of hot excitons, the prominent self-trapping effect of conjugated polymer triggers the occurrence of local infrared active phonon modes, with five peaks in the phonon spectrum as the hot excitons relax. The characteristic phonon spectrum and infrared modes hence form the fingerprint of the hot excitons of a conjugated polymer, which are readily distinguished from other excitation states in the polymer.Frequency combs in the mid-IR wavelength are usually implemented by difference-frequency generation (DFG) that mixes pump pulses and signal pulses. Different from most optical parametric amplifiers that operate at a typical low repetition rate of 2 W) longwave mid-IR frequency combs is practically feasible.Plasmonic nanostructures hold great promise for enabling advanced optical manipulation of nanoparticles in microfluidic channels, resulting from the generation of strong and controllable light focal points at the nanoscale. A primary remaining challenge in the current integration of plasmonics and microfluidics is to transport trapped nanoparticles along designated routes. Here we demonstrate through numerical simulation a plasmonic nanoparticle router that can trap and route a nanoparticle in a microfluidic channel with a continuous fluidic flow. The nanoparticle router contains a series of gold nanostrips on top of a continuous gold film. The nanostrips support both localised and propagating surface plasmons under light illumination, which underpin the trapping and routing functionalities. The nanoparticle guiding at a Y-branch junction is enabled by a small change of 50 nm in the wavelength of incident light.We present a foveated rendering method to accelerate the amplitude-only computer-generated hologram (AO-CGH) calculation in a holographic near-eye 3D display. For a given target image, we compute a high-resolution foveal region and a low-resolution peripheral region with dramatically reduced pixel numbers. Our technique significantly improves the computation speed of the AO-CGH while maintaining the perceived image quality in the fovea. Moreover, to accommodate the eye gaze angle change, we develop an algorithm to laterally shift the foveal image with negligible extra computational cost. Our technique holds great promise in advancing the holographic 3D display in real-time use.We present a scanning light detection and ranging (LIDAR) system incorporating an individual Ge-on-Si single-photon avalanche diode (SPAD) detector for depth and intensity imaging in the short-wavelength infrared region. The time-correlated single-photon counting technique was used to determine the return photon time-of-flight for target depth information. In laboratory demonstrations, depth and intensity reconstructions were made of targets at short range, using advanced image processing algorithms tailored for the analysis of single-photon time-of-flight data. These laboratory measurements were used to predict the performance of the single-photon LIDAR system at longer ranges, providing estimations that sub-milliwatt average power levels would be required for kilometer range depth measurements.We present efficient protocols for creating multipartite Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) and W states of distant stationary qubits. The system nonuniformity and/or the non-ideal single-photon scattering usually limit the performance of entanglement creation, and result in the decrease of the fidelity and the efficiency in practical quantum information processing. By using linear optical elements, errors caused by the system nonuniformity and non-ideal photon scattering can be converted into heralded loss in our protocols. Thus, the fidelity of generated multipartite entangled states keeps unchanged and only the efficiency decreases. The GHZ state of distant stationary qubits is created in a parallel way that its generation efficiency considerably increases. In the protocol for creating the W state of N distant stationary qubits, an input single photon is prepared in a superposition state and sent into N paths parallelly. We use the two-spatial-mode interferences to eliminate the "which path" single-photon scattering "knowledge".

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