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Electro-optic and Photorefractive Materials - Proceedings of the International School on Material Science and Technology, Erice, Italy, July 6-17, 1986 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1987)
Loot Price: R3,008
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Electro-optic and Photorefractive Materials - Proceedings of the International School on Material Science and Technology, Erice, Italy, July 6-17, 1986 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1987)
Series: Springer Proceedings in Physics, 18
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This volume is based on lectures and contributed papers presented
at the Eleventh Course of the International School of Materials
Science and Tech nology that was held in Erice, Sicily, Italy at
the Ettore Majorana Center for Scientific Culture during the period
6-17 July 1986. The subject of the course was "Electro-optic and
Photorefractive Materials: Applications in Sig nal Processing and
Phase Conjugation" . The fields of electro-optics and
photorefraction have developed rapidly since the invention of
lasers just over twenty-five years ago. The possibil of altering
the optical properties of a material by electric fields or by ity
optical waves is of great importance for both pure science and for
practical applications such as optical signal processing,
telecommunications and opti cal display devices. These effects
allow us to manipulate (modulate, deflect) and process a given
light wave. Modulation, deflection and processing of light waves by
means of the electro-optic effect is of fundamental importance in
fiber optic telecommuniC1. tions and sensor systems w here the
light signals can be processed prior or subsequent to transmission
through the fibers. Thin film electro-optic materials with suitable
electrode arrays on. the surface of the wave-guiding structures
result in a technology often referred to as inte grated optics. In
principle, integrated optics devices allow miniaturization and
integration of many operations onto a single chip. The
photorefractive effect, defined as a photo-induced change of the in
dices of refraction, was the other topic treated in this course."
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