Abstract
All-optical bichromatic signal processing devices have the advantage over monochromatic configurations that the signal-controlling mechanisms are independent of the signal itself. Moreover, the control beams can be in troduced and controlled independently, a particular advantage in guided-wave-optic configurations. Bulk and guided-wave experiments addressed the effects of using a pulsed nitrogen-pumped dye laser at 490-530 nm as the control beam and a CW helium-neon laser at 632.8 nm as the signal in Corning 3-70 and 3-71 filter glasses.
© 1991 Optical Society of America
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