Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the second English edition
- Preface to the first edition
- Introduction
- 1 Abbe's sine condition
- 2 Fourier optics
- 3 Effect of polarization on diffraction in systems of high numerical aperture
- 4 Gaussian beam optics
- 5 Coherent and incoherent imaging
- 6 First-order temporal coherence in classical optics
- 7 The van Cittert–Zernike theorem
- 8 Partial polarization, Stokes parameters, and the Poincaré sphere
- 9 Second-order coherence and the Hanbury Brown–Twiss experiment
- 10 What in the world are surface plasmons?
- 11 Surface plasmon polaritons on metallic surfaces
- 12 The Faraday effect
- 13 The magneto-optical Kerr effect
- 14 The Sagnac interferometer
- 15 Fabry–Pérot etalons in polarized light
- 16 The Ewald–Oseen extinction theorem
- 17 Reciprocity in classical linear optics
- 18 Optical pulse compression
- 19 The uncertainty principle in classical optics
- 20 Omni-directional dielectric mirrors
- 21 Linear optical vortices
- 22 Geometric-optical rays, Poynting's vector, and the field momenta
- 23 Doppler shift, stellar aberration, and convection of light by moving media
- 24 Diffraction gratings
- 25 Diffractive optical elements
- 26 The Talbot effect
- 27 Some quirks of total internal reflection
- 28 Evanescent coupling
- 29 Internal and external conical refraction
- 30 Transmission of light through small elliptical apertures
- 31 The method of Fox and Li
- 32 The beam propagation method
- 33 Launching light into a fiber
- 34 The optics of semiconductor diode lasers
- 35 Michelson's stellar interferometer
- 36 Bracewell's interferometric telescope
- 37 Scanning optical microscopy
- 38 Zernike's method of phase contrast
- 39 Polarization microscopy
- 40 Nomarski's differential interference contrast microscope
- 41 The van Leeuwenhoek microscope
- 42 Projection photolithography
- 43 Interaction of light with subwavelength structures
- 44 The Ronchi test
- 45 The Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensor
- 46 Ellipsometry
- 47 Holography and holographic interferometry
- 48 Self-focusing in nonlinear optical media
- 49 Spatial optical solitons
- 50 Laser heating of multilayer stacks
- Index
- References
32 - The beam propagation method
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 January 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the second English edition
- Preface to the first edition
- Introduction
- 1 Abbe's sine condition
- 2 Fourier optics
- 3 Effect of polarization on diffraction in systems of high numerical aperture
- 4 Gaussian beam optics
- 5 Coherent and incoherent imaging
- 6 First-order temporal coherence in classical optics
- 7 The van Cittert–Zernike theorem
- 8 Partial polarization, Stokes parameters, and the Poincaré sphere
- 9 Second-order coherence and the Hanbury Brown–Twiss experiment
- 10 What in the world are surface plasmons?
- 11 Surface plasmon polaritons on metallic surfaces
- 12 The Faraday effect
- 13 The magneto-optical Kerr effect
- 14 The Sagnac interferometer
- 15 Fabry–Pérot etalons in polarized light
- 16 The Ewald–Oseen extinction theorem
- 17 Reciprocity in classical linear optics
- 18 Optical pulse compression
- 19 The uncertainty principle in classical optics
- 20 Omni-directional dielectric mirrors
- 21 Linear optical vortices
- 22 Geometric-optical rays, Poynting's vector, and the field momenta
- 23 Doppler shift, stellar aberration, and convection of light by moving media
- 24 Diffraction gratings
- 25 Diffractive optical elements
- 26 The Talbot effect
- 27 Some quirks of total internal reflection
- 28 Evanescent coupling
- 29 Internal and external conical refraction
- 30 Transmission of light through small elliptical apertures
- 31 The method of Fox and Li
- 32 The beam propagation method
- 33 Launching light into a fiber
- 34 The optics of semiconductor diode lasers
- 35 Michelson's stellar interferometer
- 36 Bracewell's interferometric telescope
- 37 Scanning optical microscopy
- 38 Zernike's method of phase contrast
- 39 Polarization microscopy
- 40 Nomarski's differential interference contrast microscope
- 41 The van Leeuwenhoek microscope
- 42 Projection photolithography
- 43 Interaction of light with subwavelength structures
- 44 The Ronchi test
- 45 The Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensor
- 46 Ellipsometry
- 47 Holography and holographic interferometry
- 48 Self-focusing in nonlinear optical media
- 49 Spatial optical solitons
- 50 Laser heating of multilayer stacks
- Index
- References
Summary
The beam propagation method (BPM) is a simple numerical algorithm for simulating the propagation of a coherent beam of light through a dielectric waveguide (or other structure). Figure 32.1 shows the split-step technique used in the BPM, in which the diffraction of the beam and the phase-shifting action of the guide are separated from each other in repeated sequential steps, of separation Δz. One starts a BPM simulation by defining an initial cross-sectional beam profile in the XY-plane. The beam is then propagated (using classical diffraction formulas) a short distance Δz along the Z-axis before being sent through a phase/amplitude mask. The properties of the mask are derived from the cross-sectional profile of the waveguide (or other structure) in which the beam resides. The above steps of diffraction followed by transmission through a mask are repeated until the beam reaches its destination or until one or more excited modes of the guide become stabilized.
Instead of propagating continuously along the length of the guide, the beam in BPM travels for a short distance in a homogeneous isotropic medium, which has the average refractive index of the guide but lacks the guide's features (e.g., core, cladding, etc.). After this diffraction step, a phase/amplitude mask is introduced in the beam path. To account for the refractive index profile of the guide, the mask must phase-shift certain regions of the beam relative to others.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Classical Optics and its Applications , pp. 459 - 475Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
References
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