An ultrafast pump-probe experiment is performed on wavelength-scale, silicon-based, optical microcavities that confine light in three dimensions with resonant wavelengths near 1.5 mum, and lifetimes on the order of 20 ps. A below-bandgap probe pulse tuned to overlap the cavity resonant frequency is used to inject electromagnetic energy into the cavity, and an above-bandgap pump pulse is used to generate free carriers in the silicon, thus altering the real and imaginary components of the cavity's refractive index, and hence its resonant frequency and lifetime. When the pump pulse injects a carrier density of ~ 5 x10(17) cm(-3) before the resonant probe pulse strikes the sample, the emitted radiation from the cavity is blue-shifted by 16 times the bare cavity linewidth, and the new linewidth is 3.5 times wider than the original. When the pump pulse injects carriers, and thus suddenly perturbs the cavity properties after the probe pulse has injected energy into the cavity, we show that the emitted radiation is not simply a superposition of Lorentzians centred at the initial and perturbed cavity frequencies. Under these conditions, a simple model and the experimental results show that the power spectrum of radiation emitted by the stored electromagnetic energy when the cavity frequency is perturbed during ring-down consists of a series of coherent oscillations between the original and perturbed cavity frequencies, accompanied by a gradual decrease and broadening of the original cavity line, and the emergence of the new cavity resonance. The modified cavity lifetime is shown to have a significant impact on the evolution of the emission as a function of the pump-probe delay.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/oe.15.011472DOI Listing

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