Publications by authors named "Aksyuk V"

We present a new, to the best of our knowledge, approach for self-heterodyne optical frequency comb (OFC) spectroscopy in which a single Mach-Zehnder modulator is utilized to generate both an optical frequency comb and a frequency-shifted local oscillator. This method allows for coherent, time-domain averaging to be performed without the need for feedback mechanisms or software corrections. As an initial demonstration, we have measured acetylene rovibrational transition frequencies with coherently averaged comb spectra.

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In many physical systems, the interaction with an open environment leads to energy dissipation and reduced coherence, making it challenging to control these systems effectively. In the context of wave phenomena, such lossy interactions can be specifically controlled to isolate the system, a condition known as a bound-state-in-continuum (BIC). Despite the recent advances in engineered BICs for photonic waveguiding, practical implementations are still largely polarization- and geometry-specific, and the underlying principles remain to be systematically explored.

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Efficient power coupling between on-chip guided and free-space optical modes requires precision spatial mode matching with apodized grating couplers. Yet, grating apodizations are often limited by the minimum feature size of the fabrication approach. This is especially challenging when small feature sizes are required to fabricate gratings at short wavelengths or to achieve weakly scattered light for large-area gratings.

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On-chip grating couplers directly connect photonic circuits to free-space light. The commonly used photonic gratings have been specialized for small areas, specific intensity profiles, and nonvertical beam projection. This falls short of the precise and flexible wavefront control over large beam areas needed to empower emerging integrated miniaturized optical systems that leverage volumetric light-matter interactions, including trapping, cooling, and interrogation of atoms, bio- and chemi- sensing, and complex free-space interconnect.

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The commercialization of atomic technologies requires replacing laboratory-scale laser setups with compact and manufacturable optical platforms. Complex arrangements of free-space beams can be generated on chip through a combination of integrated photonics and metasurface optics. In this work, we combine these two technologies using flip-chip bonding and demonstrate an integrated optical architecture for realizing a compact strontium atomic clock.

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Thermal fluctuations often impose both fundamental and practical measurement limits on high-performance sensors, motivating the development of techniques that bypass the limitations imposed by thermal noise outside cryogenic environments. Here, we theoretically propose and experimentally demonstrate a measurement method that reduces the effective transducer temperature and improves the measurement precision of a dynamic impulse response signal. Thermal noise-limited, integrated cavity optomechanical atomic force microscopy probes are used in a photothermal-induced resonance measurement to demonstrate an effective temperature reduction by a factor of ≈25, i.

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Article Synopsis
  • Twisted light with orbital angular momentum (OAM) is valuable for various applications like communications and microscopy, but current microresonators generating high OAM have significantly lower quality factors (Q) than traditional ones.
  • Through a new model that analyzes mode coupling in photonic crystal rings, researchers have achieved much higher Q values and improved understanding of limits on OAM ejection efficiency and potential.
  • This advancement not only enhances the performance of microresonator OAM generation but also paves the way for novel applications integrating OAM into chip-based technologies.
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  • Micro-/nanocavities are crucial for enhancing light-matter interactions in cavity quantum electrodynamics (cQED), with whispering gallery mode (WGM) geometries offering ease of design but limited mode volume.
  • New photonic crystal ring (PhCR) designs, specifically "rod" and "slit" unit cells, maintain high quality factors and improve defect localization compared to traditional WGM structures.
  • The study highlights that these new PhCRs are easier to fabricate and provide a promising platform for further exploration in cQED applications.
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Whispering gallery modes (WGMs) in circularly symmetric optical microresonators exhibit integer quantized angular momentum numbers due to the boundary condition imposed by the geometry. Here, we show that incorporating a photonic crystal pattern in an integrated microring can result in WGMs with fractional optical angular momentum. By choosing the photonic crystal periodicity to open a photonic band gap with a band-edge momentum lying between that of two WGMs of the unperturbed ring, we observe hybridized WGMs with half-integer quantized angular momentum numbers (m∈Z+1/2).

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Thermal properties of materials are often determined by measuring thermalization processes; however, such measurements at the nanoscale are challenging because they require high sensitivity concurrently with high temporal and spatial resolutions. Here, we develop an optomechanical cantilever probe and customize an atomic force microscope with low detection noise ≈1 fm/Hz over a wide (>100 MHz) bandwidth that measures thermalization dynamics with ≈10 ns temporal resolution, ≈35 nm spatial resolution, and high sensitivity. This setup enables fast nanoimaging of thermal conductivity (η) and interfacial thermal conductance () with measurement throughputs ≈6000× faster than conventional macroscale-resolution time-domain thermoreflectance acquiring the full sample thermalization.

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Waves entering a spatially uniform lossy medium typically undergo exponential intensity decay, arising from either the energy loss of the Beer-Lambert-Bouguer transmission law or the evanescent penetration during reflection. Recently, exceptional point singularities in non-Hermitian systems have been linked to unconventional wave propagation. Here, we theoretically propose and experimentally demonstrate exponential decay free wave propagation in a purely lossy medium.

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Article Synopsis
  • Many nonlinear systems exhibit eigenmodes with frequencies that depend on their amplitude, leading to strong interactions during internal resonances, which enable rapid energy exchange and complex dynamics in mechanical resonators.
  • Recent experimental findings highlight the importance of persistent nonlinear phase-locked states at these internal resonances to understand the dynamic behavior of nonlinear systems with coupled eigenmodes.
  • This research provides a comprehensive model that explains the dynamics, energy exchange, and relaxation pathways of resonators, suggesting implications for advancements across various fields like photonics and nanomechanics.
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Advances in integrated photonics open up exciting opportunities for batch-fabricated optical sensors using high-quality-factor nanophotonic cavities to achieve ultrahigh sensitivities and bandwidths. The sensitivity improves with increasing optical power; however, localized absorption and heating within a micrometer-scale mode volume prominently distorts the cavity resonances and strongly couples the sensor response to thermal dynamics, limiting the sensitivity and hindering the measurement of broadband time-dependent signals. Here, we derive a frequency-dependent photonic sensor transfer function that accounts for thermo-optical dynamics and quantitatively describes the measured broadband optomechanical signal from an integrated photonic atomic force microscopy nanomechanical probe.

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Accurate coupling between optical modes at the interface between photonic chips and free space is required for the development of many on-chip devices. This control is critical in quantum technologies where large-diameter beams with designed mode profiles are required. Yet, these designs are often difficult to achieve at shorter wavelengths where fabrication limits the resolution of designed devices.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study presents a new all-optical method for characterizing intrinsic losses in optical microresonators, specifically focusing on separating absorption and radiative losses.
  • This technique relies solely on linear spectroscopy and an optically measured thermal time constant, demonstrating high accuracy.
  • Results indicate that while total dissipation rates vary significantly, the small absorptive losses are effectively differentiated from dominant radiation losses, aligning with expected bulk material absorption values.
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In this article, we present a nanoelectromechanical system (NEMS) designed to detect changes in the Casimir energy. The Casimir effect is a result of the appearance of quantum fluctuations in an electromagnetic vacuum. Previous experiments have used nano- or microscale parallel plate capacitors to detect the Casimir force by measuring the small attractive force these fluctuations exert between the two surfaces.

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All physical oscillators are subject to thermodynamic and quantum perturbations, fundamentally limiting measurement of their resonance frequency. Analyses assuming specific ways of estimating frequency can underestimate the available precision and overlook unconventional measurement regimes. Here we derive a general, estimation-method-independent Cramer Rao lower bound for a linear harmonic oscillator resonance frequency measurement uncertainty, seamlessly accounting for the quantum, thermodynamic and instrumental limitations, including Fisher information from quantum backaction- and thermodynamically-driven fluctuations.

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Kirigami structures provide a promising approach to transform flat films into 3D complex structures that are difficult to achieve by conventional fabrication approaches. By designing the cutting geometry, it is shown that distinct buckling-induced out-of-plane configurations can be obtained, separated by a sharp transition characterized by a critical geometric dimension of the structures. In situ electron microscopy experiments reveal the effect of the ratio between the in-plane cut size and film thickness on out-of-plane configurations.

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Multiphoton polymer cross-linking evolves as the core process behind high-resolution additive microfabrication with soft materials for implantable/wearable electronics, tissue engineering, microrobotics, biosensing, drug delivery, Electrons and soft X-rays, in principle, can offer even higher resolution and printing rates. However, these powerful lithographic tools are difficult to apply to vacuum incompatible liquid precursor solutions used in continuous additive fabrication. In this work, using biocompatible hydrogel as a model soft material, we demonstrate high-resolution in-liquid polymer cross-linking using scanning electron and X-ray microscopes.

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Microfabricated mechanical resonators enable precision measurement techniques from atomic force microscopy to emerging quantum applications. The resonance frequency-based physical sensing combines high precision with long-term stability. However, widely used SiN resonators suffer from frequency sensitivity to temperature due to the differential thermal expansion vs the Si substrates.

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Combining reprogrammable optical networks with complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) electronics is expected to provide a platform for technological developments in on-chip integrated optoelectronics. We demonstrate how opto-electro-mechanical effects in micrometer-scale hybrid photonic-plasmonic structures enable light switching under CMOS voltages and low optical losses (0.1 decibel).

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The common assumption that precision is the limit of accuracy in localization microscopy and the typical absence of comprehensive calibration of optical microscopes lead to a widespread issue-overconfidence in measurement results with nanoscale statistical uncertainties that can be invalid due to microscale systematic errors. In this article, we report a comprehensive solution to this underappreciated problem. We develop arrays of subresolution apertures into the first reference materials that enable localization errors approaching the atomic scale across a submillimeter field.

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We investigate the collective dynamics and nondegenerate parametric resonance (NPR) of coplanar, interdigitated arrays of microcantilevers distinguished by their cantilevers having linearly expanding lengths and thus varying natural frequencies. Within a certain excitation frequency range, the resonators begin oscillating via NPR across the entire array consisting of 200 single-crystal silicon cantilevers. Tunable coupling generated from fringing electrostatic fields provides a mechanism to vary the scope of the NPR.

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Densely integrated photonic circuits enable scalable, complex processing of optical signals, including modulation, multiplexing, wavelength conversion, and detection. Directly interfacing such integrated circuits to free-space optical modes will enable novel optical functions, such as chip-scale sensing, interchip free-space interconnect and cooling, trapping, and interrogation of atoms. However, doing this within the limits of planar batch fabrication requires new approaches for bridging the large mode scale mismatch.

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