We present the results of realization and study of a light beam splitting effect based on a full-optically controlled holographic diffraction grating. The high quality, light responsive, periodic structure, which is exploited as tunable beam splitter, is monitored by combining its zero and first diffracted orders in a Mach-Zehnder geometry interferometer. The interference pattern exhibits a dependence of the fringe visibility on the external optical pump power utilized to drive the splitting effect. The visibility, characterized by means of a standard pump-probe optical setup, reveals a strong dependence on the polarization of the probe radiation and on its incident angle as well. The effect is reversible and repeatable, and shows a continuously adjustable fringe visibility in the range 0.94-0.2, with response times in the millisecond range. © 2010 American Institute of Physics.
Optically controlled holographic beam splitter / De Sio, Luciano; Tedesco, Alessandro; Tabirian, Nelson; Umeton, Cesare. - In: APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS. - ISSN 0003-6951. - 97:18(2010), p. 183507. [10.1063/1.3513289]
Optically controlled holographic beam splitter
De Sio, Luciano
;
2010
Abstract
We present the results of realization and study of a light beam splitting effect based on a full-optically controlled holographic diffraction grating. The high quality, light responsive, periodic structure, which is exploited as tunable beam splitter, is monitored by combining its zero and first diffracted orders in a Mach-Zehnder geometry interferometer. The interference pattern exhibits a dependence of the fringe visibility on the external optical pump power utilized to drive the splitting effect. The visibility, characterized by means of a standard pump-probe optical setup, reveals a strong dependence on the polarization of the probe radiation and on its incident angle as well. The effect is reversible and repeatable, and shows a continuously adjustable fringe visibility in the range 0.94-0.2, with response times in the millisecond range. © 2010 American Institute of Physics.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.