ABSTRACT
We analyze the destructive interference in monolayer graphene under Landau quantization in a time-dependent way by using the Bloch-Maxwell formalism. Based on this analysis, we investigate the dynamics control of an infrared probe and a terahertz (THz) switch pulses in graphene. In presence of the THz switch pulse, the destructive interference take places and can be optimized so that the monolayer graphene is completely transparent to the infrared probe pulse. In absence of the THz switch pulse, however, the infrared probe pulse is absorbed due to such a interference does not take place. Furthermore, we provide a clear physics insight of this destructive interference by using the classical dressed-state theory. Conversely, the present model may be rendered either absorbing or transparent to the THz switch pulse. By choosing appropriate wave form of the probe and switch pulses, we show that both infrared probe and THz switch pulses exhibit the steplike transitions between absorption and transparency. Such steplike transitions can be used to devise a versatile quantum interference-based solid-state optical switching with distinct wave-lengths for optical communication devices.
ABSTRACT
We demonstrate that a single subcycle optical pulse can be generated when a pulse with a few optical cycles penetrates through resonant two-level dense media with a subwavelength structure. The single-cycle gap soliton phenomenon in the full Maxwell-Bloch equations without the frame of the slowly varying envelope and rotating wave approximations is observed. Our study shows that the subwavelength structure can be used to suppress the frequency shift caused by intrapulse four-wave mixing in continuous media and supports the formation of single-cycle gap solitons even in the case when the structure period breaks the Bragg condition. This suggests a way toward shortening high-intensity laser fields to few- and even single-cycle pulse durations.