Brillouin scattering
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Brillouin scattering occurs when light in a medium (such as water or a crystal) interacts with density variations and changes its path. The density variations may be due to acoustic modes, such as phonons, or temperature gradients. As described in classical physics, when the medium is compressed its index of refraction changes and the light's path necessarily bends.
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[edit] Definition
From a quantum point of view, Brillouin scattering is an interaction of light photons with acoustic or vibrational quanta (phonons), with magnetic spin waves (magnons), or with other low frequency quasiparticles interacting with light. The interaction consists of an inelastic scattering process in which a phonon or magnon is either created (Stokes process) or annihilated (anti-Stokes process). The energy of the scattered light is slightly changed, that is decreased for a Stokes process and increased for an anti-Stokes process. This shift, known as the Brillouin shift, is equal to the energy of the interacting phonon and magnon and thus Brillouin scattering can be used to measure phonon and magnon energies.
[edit] Relationship to Raman scattering
The inelastic scattering process of Brillouin light scattering is in principle the same as Raman scattering. Historically Brillouin scattering denominates the scattering of acoustic phonons, while Raman scattering refers to the scattering from molecule vibrations and optic phonons. Nowadays the difference between Brillouin scattering and Raman scattering is considered to lie in the different experimental techniques and the resulting different available frequency range. The term Brillouin scattering labels an experimental detection of the frequency shift with an interferometer, while Raman scattering labels a setup employing a grating spectrometer. Brillouin scattering is technically limited to the detection of quasiparticles with frequencies below about 500 GHz, while with Raman scattering much higher frequencies in the THz range can be measured.
[edit] Stimulated Brillouin scattering
For intense beams (e.g. laser light) travelling in a medium such as an optical fiber, the variations in the electric field of the beam itself may produce acoustic vibrations in the medium via electrostriction. The beam may undergo Brillouin scattering from these vibrations, usually in opposite direction to the incoming beam, a phenomenon known as stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS). For liquids and gases, typical frequency shifts are of the order of 1–10 GHz (wavelength shifts of ~1–10 pm for visible light). Stimulated Brillouin scattering is one effect by which optical phase conjugation can take place.
[edit] Discovery
The phenomenon of inelastic scattering of light due to acoustic phonons was first described by Leon Brillouin (1889-1969) in 1922 and 4 years later in 1926 independently by Leonid Mandelstam. In order to credit Mandelstam it is also denoted as Brillouin-Mandelstam scattering (BMS). Other commonly used names are Brillouin light scattering (BLS) and Brillouin-Mandelstam light scattering (BMLS).
[edit] Notes
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Brillouin scattering in the Encyclopedia of Laser Physics and Technology
- Surface Brillouin Scattering, U. Hawaii
- List of labs performing Brillouin scattering measurements
[edit] References
- L. Brillouin, Ann. Phys. (Paris) 17, 88 (1922).
- L.I. Mandelstam, Zh. Russ. Fiz-Khim. Ova. 58, 381 (1926).