giovedì 5 marzo 2026

Lez #5+6 Helmholtz equation: quasi-monochromatic solution, with beta1 and losses

  We considered as a possible solution a quasi-monochromatic wavepacket, meaning a plane wave with a "carrier" frequency at w0 modulated by a slowing varying envelope. For the z dependence of the slowing varying part we factored out a plane wave-like term with a constant, real phase beta(w_0). Moving to frequency domain we obtained an equation for the envelope depending on beta(w), a complex, frequency dependent quantity. We expanded the real part of beta(w) around w_0 as we expect the spectrum of the solution to be "narrow" with respect to w_0. We considered the first (beta1) and second (beta2) orders of the rel part expansion, while we took the entire imaginary part alpha (responsible for the absorption). We went back to time domain. Retaining only beta1 and the absorption (the imaginary part of beta(w), for which we assume a constant imaginary value) we found for the envelope a solution propagating as a wave with velocity 1/beta1 (group velocity). Losses appear as an exponential decay in real space. As a reference, see the lecture notes, the first Agrawaal chapter 1.2.3 and second: 2.1 e 2.3.1 (Nonlinear Fiber Optics Govind P. Agrawal).

mercoledì 4 marzo 2026

Lez #3+4 From Maxwell to Helmotz

  We recalled Maxwell's equations in the most general form (presence of medium, external charges and currents). We then retrieved the solution in vacuum without sources, recalling the concept of plane wave, Poynting vector, Fourier transform (derivative and convolution theorem). We then moved to the case of a dielectric medium (non magnetic), introducing within the linear approximation the time-dependent (non local) relation between polarization and electric field in the homogeneous and isotropic case. This implies a convolution in time domain. For example under an impulsive electric field (Dirac-delta(t)) the material response occurs even at finite times as P(t)=eps0*chi(t). Moving to the frequency domain, we derived the Helmotz equation in which the material properties enter via the (generally complex) frequency dependent dielectric constant. Pay attention to the way we treat the real (Taylor expansion) and imaginary (constant absorption at w_0) part of beta(w).

Please install MATLAB on your laptops (freely distributed by Sapienza: https://www.uniroma1.it/it/pagina/software-gratuito), which we will soon use to simulate pulse propagation.

martedì 3 marzo 2026

Lez #1+2 Course overview

 Usual approximations adopted for classical radiation matter interaction. Beyond plane and monochromatic waves. Expectations for linear propagation of a wave packet. General features of a non linear process and pulsed light: frequency mixing and temporal resolution. Non (temporal) locality of the susceptibility. From spectroscopy to microscopy.