Optical bistability

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Abstract

Optical bistability is a phenomenon that arises in the transmission of light by an optical cavity filled with a medium which presents saturable absorption or nonlinear dispersion. From the theoretical viewpoint, optical bistability is a remarkable example of cooperative behaviour in an open system driven far from thermal equilibrium. From the practical viewpoint, optical bistability offers the possibility of realizing memory elements that may perhaps be used to construct an optical computer. We illustrate the basic physical principles of optical bistability at steady state, and the main features of the transient behaviour. The role and the effects of fluctuations (noise) are described in general. Particular attention is devoted to the situations in which the output of the system 4s not stationary in time, but oscillatory (self-pulsing behaviour), so that the system works as a converter of continuous wave light into pulsed. It is shown that, according to the values of the external parameters, the oscillations can be either periodic in time or completely aperiodic (optical turbulence). The state of the art in the problem of optical bistability is briefly discussed. © 1983 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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APA

Lugiato, L. A. (1983). Optical bistability. Contemporary Physics, 24(4), 333–371. https://doi.org/10.1080/00107518308210690

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