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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

High Precision Comb-Assisted Molecular Spectroscopy in the Mid-Infrared

Alsaif, Bidoor 06 1900 (has links)
In several fields, such as biology, chemistry, combustion and environmental science, laser absorption spectroscopy represents an invaluable tool for the detection and identification of a variety of molecular species in the gas phase. For this detection to be quantitative, it is of paramount importance to rely on accurate spectroscopic parameters for the involved absorption lines in terms of line strength, line center frequency, pressure broadening, and pressure shift coefficients. The mid-infrared region offers the most favorable conditions for sensitive and chemically selective detection. The sensitivity derives from the presence of intense fundamental ro-vibrational transitions of molecules, whereas chemical selectivity relates to the unique absorption spectrum that molecules possess in the mid-IR region, thereby known as the fingerprint region. In this thesis, we combine the accelerating technology of optical frequency combs (OFC), which are powerful tools for accurate optical frequency measurements, with the wide tunability and single line emission in the mid-IR of extended cavity quantum cascade lasers (EC-QCL), to perform highly resolved, accurate and sensitive measurements in the fingerprint region, from 7.25 to 8 μm. Specifically, we have been able to lock for the first time the optical frequency of an EC-QCL to an OFC by utilizing nonlinear optics in the form of sum frequency generation (SFG) (Lamperti, AlSaif et al., 2018) and have exploited this comb-locked EC-QCL for an accurate survey of the entire ν1 ro-vibrational band of one of the most important greenhouse gases, nitrous oxide (N2O). The developed spectrometer is able to operate over a wide region of ~ 100 cm-1, in a fully automated fashion, while affording a 63 kHz uncertainty on the retrieved line center frequencies. The measurement allowed us to determine very accurately rotational constants of both ground and excited states of the ν1 band of N2O through the measurements of tens of lines of the P and R branches (AlSaif et al., JQSRT 2018). The spectrometer was then upgraded with a more recent and narrower linewidth EC-QCL to perform sub-Doppler saturated spectroscopy on the same N2O sample at a spectral resolution below 1 MHz, the sharpest ever observed with this type of laser. Finally, we worked at adding high sensitivity to the apparatus by introducing the gas in a high-finesse passive resonator and by developing a system to measure the intra-cavity absorption with cavity ring-down spectroscopy (CRDS) together with comb calibration.
22

IoT Wireless Communication Based on Optical Frequency Identification for Object Detection and Tracking

Diana Alejandra Narvaez (17593545) 12 December 2023 (has links)
<p dir="ltr">Due to the rapidly evolving landscape of the Internet of Things (IoT), efficient<br>communication solutions are increasingly sought after. The thesis delves into<br>the development and validation of two optical communication systems (IDC,<br>2021). Capitalizing on the benefits of Optical Wireless Communication (OWC)<br>and Optical Frequency Identification(OFID), two innovative optical systems are<br>introduced: a single-pixel OFID optical reader and a computer vision-based<br>communication system that utilizes an OLED tag, a camera, and a laptop as a<br>reader. These systems are designed to surpass the challenges associated with<br>existing technologies like RFID and Bluetooth, offering enhancements in<br>security, privacy, and autonomy through the integration of energy harvesting<br>technologies. Moreover, the practical application of these systems in real-world<br>settings, such as animal and object identification, highlight their versatility<br>and potential for diverse IoT applications. The prototypes presented were<br>systematically developed and subjected to a series of evaluations to assess their<br>performance. These tests focused on measuring the communication distance<br>achieved, the power consumption of the devices, and the accuracy of data<br>transmission. The experiments demonstrated the technical feasibility of the<br>systems in real IoT environments, affirming their effectiveness in overcoming<br>distance limitations and energy efficiency challenges and providing an<br>alternative solution for accurate data transmission in environments where radio<br>communications cannot operate. These findings underscore the significance and<br>applicability of optical communications.<br>highlight<br></p>
23

Blue laser for precision spectroscopy : toward optical frequency standard referenced to laser cooled calcium atoms

Grishina, Vera January 2008 (has links)
Optical frequency standards with the reference to a narrow electronic transition of a laser-cooled collection of neutral atomic particles are becoming essential tools of research in modern precision physics experiments. In the core of a building block of an optical frequency standard is the optical continuous wave laser that has a good spectral purity of the emitted light. Such a stable optical oscillator is highly desirable in high resolution spectroscopy, if it emits in a good quality beam at a short visible wavelength. This Master thesis explores efficient techniques for building such an optical frequency source intended for use in the cooling and trapping of Calcium atoms scheme. The strong dipole transition at the blue wavelength in the atomic Calcium is needed to reduce the kinetic energy of atoms by nearly six orders of magnitude. A further reduction in the thermal energy of the laser cooled atoms is required to locate with ultra-high precision the 400 Hz narrow clock transition of the stable 40Ca isotope. The experimental methods that achieve this and approach sub-microkelvin temperature of the laser cooled bosonic isotopes of alkaline earths are inspected. The blue laser with a uniform intensity distribution in the beam is useful to maintain the trapped number of cold atoms during these experiments. The spectroscopic properties of the relative transitions in Calcium atom are also reviewed following relevant publications in the area. The constructed blue laser can be used as a primary wavelength source in the lasers network for cooling and trapping of Calcium atoms. These experiments will constitute part of the project to build an optical atom clock referenced to 40Ca narrow linewidth transition. The blue laser is constructed by generating second harmonic in a Potassium Niobate crystal, which is temperature controlled to use a type-I noncritical phase-matching of the optical nonlinear process. The power of the intracavity-generated second harmonic depends on the resonance properties of the optical resonator where this nonlinear crystal is placed. The study is aimed at characterising the designed optical resonator and the experimental parameters that describe it. The formula is derived that relates the resonance power enhancement coefficient with finesse and the power coupling contrast of a passive optical cavity. The obtained relationship is verfied during the experiments. The produced efficiency of the intracavity second harmonic generation is approx. 0.0023 mWblue/(mWred)2. The research work also examines the noise characteristics of the infrared diode laser that is used as a pump source for the intracavity generated second harmonic and determines the spectroscopic precision of the produced blue light. The frequency locking experiment is analysed using the unbalanced scheme of the polarisation stabilisation technique. The designed optical buildup cavity became a part of the unbalanced frequency discriminator in such a scheme. The results demonstrate high gain of frequency noise suppression of the stabilised laser. The unbalanced arrangement of the H}ansch-Couillaud technique has been possible due to a very low amplitude noise of semiconductor lasers.
24

Cavity enhanced optical sensing / Kavitetsförstärkt optisk detektion

Silander, Isak January 2015 (has links)
An optical cavity comprises a set of mirrors between which light can be reflected a number of times. The selectivity and stability of optical cavities make them extremely useful as frequency references or discri­mi­nators. With light coupled into the cavity, a sample placed inside a cavity will experience a significantly increased interaction length. Hence, they can be used also as amplifiers for sensing purposes. In the field of laser spectroscopy, some of the most sensitive techniques are therefore built upon optical cavities. In this work optical cavities are used to measure properties of gas samples, i.e. absorption, dispersion, and refractivity, with unprecedented precision. The most sensitive detection technique of all, Doppler-broadened noise-immune cavity enhanced optical heterodyne molecular spectrometry (Db NICE-OHMS), has in this work been developed to an ultra-sensitive spectroscopic technique with unprecedented detection sensitivity. By identifying limiting factors, realizing new experimental setups, and deter­mining optimal detection conditions, the sensitivity of the technique has been improved several orders of magnitude, from 8 × 10-11 to 9 × 10-14 cm-1. The pressure interval in which NICE-OHMS can be applied has been extended by deri­vation and verification of dispersions equations for so-called Dicke narrowing and speed dependent broadening effects. The theoretical description of NICE-OHMS has been expanded through the development of a formalism that can be applied to the situations when the cavity absorption cannot be considered to be small, which has expanded the dynamic range of the technique. In order to enable analysis of a large number of molecules at their most sensitive transitions (mainly their funda­mental CH vibrational transitions) NICE-OHMS instrumentation has also been developed for measurements in the mid-infrared (MIR) region. While it has been difficult to realize this in the past due to a lack of optical modulators in the MIR range, the system has been based on an optical para­metric oscillator, which can be modulated in the near-infrared (NIR) range. As the index of refraction can be related to density, it is possible to retrieve gas density from measurements of the index of refraction. Two such instru­men­tations have been realized. The first one is based on a laser locked to a measure­ment cavity whose frequency is measured by compassion with an optical frequency comb. The second one is based on two lasers locked to a dual-cavity (i.e. one reference and one measurement cavity). By these methods changes in gas density down to 1 × 10-9 kg/m3 can be detected. All instrumentations presented in this work have pushed forward the limits of what previously has been considered measurable. The knowledge acquired will be of great use for future ultrasensitive cavity-based detection methods.
25

Phase-matching Second-order Optical Nonlinear Interactions using Bragg Reflection Waveguides: A Platform for Integrated Parametric Devices

Abolghasem, Payam 29 August 2011 (has links)
Bragg reflection waveguides (BRW) or one-dimensional photonic bandgap structures have been demonstrated for phase-matching chi(2) nonlinearities in AlxGa1-xAs. The method exploits strong modal dispersion of a Bragg mode and total internal reflection modes co-propagating inside the waveguide. It is shown that phase-matching is attained among the lowest order modes of interacting harmonics, which allows maximizing the utilization of harmonics powers for nonlinear interactions. As our first demonstration, we report second-harmonic generation (SHG) of a 2-ps telecommunication pump in a 2.4 mm long slab BRW. The conversion efficiency is estimated as 2.0 %/W.cm^2 with a generated SH power of 729 nW. This efficiency has been considerably improved by introducing lateral confinement of optical modes in ridge structures. Characterizations denote that efficiency of SHG in ridge BRWs can increase by over an order of magnitude in comparison to that of the slab device. Also, we report continuous-wave SHG in BRWs. Using a telecommunication pump with a power of 98 mW, the continuous-wave SH power of 23 nW is measured in a 2.0 mm long device. Significant enhancements of chi(2) interactions is obtained in the modified design of matching-layer enhanced BRW (ML-BRW). For the first time, we report type-II SHG in ML-BRW, where the second-harmonic power of 60 µW is measured for a pump power of 3.3 mW in a 2.2 mm long sample. Also, we demonstrate the existence of type-0 SHG, where both pump and SH signal have an identical TM polarization state. It is shown that the efficiency of the type-0 process is comparable to type-I and type-II processes with the phase-matching wavelengths of all three interactions lying within a spectral window as small as 17 nm. ML-BRW is further reported for sum-frequency and difference-frequency generations. For applications requiring high pump power, a generalized ML-BRW design is proposed and demonstrated. The proposed structure offsets the destructive effects of third-order nonlinearities on chi(2) processes when high power harmonics are involved. This is carried out through incorporation of larger bandgap materials by using high aluminum content AlxGa1-xAs layers without undermining the nonlinear conversion efficiency. Theoretical investigations of BRWs as integrated sources of photon-pairs with frequency correlation properties are discussed. It is shown that the versatile dispersion properties in BRWs enables generation of telecommunication anti-correlated photon-pairs with bandwidth tunablity between 1 nm and 450 nm.
26

Phase-matching Second-order Optical Nonlinear Interactions using Bragg Reflection Waveguides: A Platform for Integrated Parametric Devices

Abolghasem, Payam 29 August 2011 (has links)
Bragg reflection waveguides (BRW) or one-dimensional photonic bandgap structures have been demonstrated for phase-matching chi(2) nonlinearities in AlxGa1-xAs. The method exploits strong modal dispersion of a Bragg mode and total internal reflection modes co-propagating inside the waveguide. It is shown that phase-matching is attained among the lowest order modes of interacting harmonics, which allows maximizing the utilization of harmonics powers for nonlinear interactions. As our first demonstration, we report second-harmonic generation (SHG) of a 2-ps telecommunication pump in a 2.4 mm long slab BRW. The conversion efficiency is estimated as 2.0 %/W.cm^2 with a generated SH power of 729 nW. This efficiency has been considerably improved by introducing lateral confinement of optical modes in ridge structures. Characterizations denote that efficiency of SHG in ridge BRWs can increase by over an order of magnitude in comparison to that of the slab device. Also, we report continuous-wave SHG in BRWs. Using a telecommunication pump with a power of 98 mW, the continuous-wave SH power of 23 nW is measured in a 2.0 mm long device. Significant enhancements of chi(2) interactions is obtained in the modified design of matching-layer enhanced BRW (ML-BRW). For the first time, we report type-II SHG in ML-BRW, where the second-harmonic power of 60 µW is measured for a pump power of 3.3 mW in a 2.2 mm long sample. Also, we demonstrate the existence of type-0 SHG, where both pump and SH signal have an identical TM polarization state. It is shown that the efficiency of the type-0 process is comparable to type-I and type-II processes with the phase-matching wavelengths of all three interactions lying within a spectral window as small as 17 nm. ML-BRW is further reported for sum-frequency and difference-frequency generations. For applications requiring high pump power, a generalized ML-BRW design is proposed and demonstrated. The proposed structure offsets the destructive effects of third-order nonlinearities on chi(2) processes when high power harmonics are involved. This is carried out through incorporation of larger bandgap materials by using high aluminum content AlxGa1-xAs layers without undermining the nonlinear conversion efficiency. Theoretical investigations of BRWs as integrated sources of photon-pairs with frequency correlation properties are discussed. It is shown that the versatile dispersion properties in BRWs enables generation of telecommunication anti-correlated photon-pairs with bandwidth tunablity between 1 nm and 450 nm.
27

Génération photonique de signaux micro-ondes très bas bruit de phase par peignes de fréquences optiques / Optical frequency comb based ultralow phase noise photonic microwave generation

Bouchand, Romain 21 November 2017 (has links)
Les meilleurs oscillateurs dans le domaine micro-onde sont souvent des systèmes encombrants ou requérant une maintenance fastidieuse ce qui freine leur utilisation pour des applications mobiles ou dans des environnements aux conditions difficiles. L'avènement des peignes de fréquences optiques, récompensés par un prix Nobel en 2005, a ouvert de nouvelles perspectives en permettant un transfert des qualités inégalées des sources optiques vers le domaine micro-onde. Dans la technique utilisée au LNE-SYRTE, la division de fréquence optique, un signal micro-onde peut être extrait d'un laser ultra-stable dans l'infrarouge proche par photodétection, ce qui s'accompagne d'une réduction du bruit égale au carré du rapport des fréquences initiale et finale, soit plus de 8 ordres de grandeurs. Ce bénéfice est cependant réduit par différents processus collatéraux qui augmentent le niveau de bruit final. Le travail décrit dans cette thèse est la génération et la caractérisation du signal micro-onde le plus pur généré jusqu'à présent. Les différents processus introduisant un excès de bruit lors de la conversion opto-éléctronique sont étudiés et en partie surmontés. En particulier la conversion du bruit d'amplitude du laser femtoseconde vers la porteuse micro-onde est analysée en détail et son effet grandement réduit. Les résultats obtenus laissent penser que les techniques optiques de génération de micro-ondes vont bouleverser l'état de l'art. Les niveaux de pureté atteints et les techniques développées peuvent bénéficier un vaste éventail de domaines comme les radars mobiles, la métrologie temps-fréquence ou les prochaines générations de télécommunications à ultra-haut débit. / State-of-the-art microwave oscillators are typically bulky systems requiring tedious maintenance which is hindering their use in mobile applications or in demanding environments. The invention of the optical frequency combs, which was awarded a Nobel prize in 2005, was a game-changer as it enabled a high-fidelity transfer of the unrivalled properties of optical oscillators to the microwave domain. In the technique used at SYRTE, the optical frequency division, a microwave signal can be extracted from a near-infrared ultra-stable laser using photodetection. The transfer is accompanied by a reduction of phase noise equal to the microwave-to-optical frequency ratio squared, i.e. more than eight order of magnitudes. This benefit is however reduced by several processes producing excess noise during the transfer. The work described in this thesis is the generation of the lowest phase noise microwave signal ever reported. The different processes inducing excess noise are analyzed and, in part, overcome. Specifically, the conversion of the femtosecond laser intensity noise to the microwave phase noise is studied thoroughly and its effect significantly reduced. The results augur that the optical approaches in microwave generation are on the verge to disrupt the state-of-the-art. The noise levels demonstrated and the techniques developed can benefit a large range of applications such as mobile radars, time and frequency metrology or the next generation of ultrafast telecommunication networks.
28

Micro-dispositifs accordables pour la conversion de fréquences optiques

Kusiaku, Koku 04 October 2012 (has links)
L'absence de source continue monochromatique Térahertz (THz) appropriée constitue un handicap majeur pour le développement des applications associées à cette gamme de longueur d’ondes. En effet, les technologies électroniques et optiques actuelles ne permettent de couvrir qu’une part réduite du spectre électromagnétique THz (0,3-10 THz). Dans ce contexte, la conversion de fréquences optiques, et plus précisément le photo –mélange, est une voie prometteuse pour la génération de signal THz de haute pureté spectrale sur toute la fenêtre du spectre THz. Le photomélange consiste à pomper un dispositif optoélectronique ultrarapide par deux signaux lasers dont les fréquences sont séparées par quelques THz (0,3 à 5 THz). Dans ce travail, nous proposons un nouveau micro-résonateur photonique bifréquence à cavité verticale et monolithique pour la réalisation de source laser bifréquence pour le photomélange. Ce nouveau résonateur est basé sur le couplage de deux résonateurs photoniques, un cristal photonique membranaire résonant d’une part et une cavité Fabry Pérot verticale d’autre part, accordés spectralement, pour réaliser un composant bifréquence. Le couplage optique résultant de l’association de ces deux éléments permet la génération de deux modes hybrides dont la différence de fréquence peut être ajustée en fonction du taux de couplage et donc de la position du cristal photonique dans le micro-résonateur. Le présent travail de thèse porte sur la conception, la fabrication de ce nouveau dispositif bifréquence et son application à la réalisation d’une source laser bi-mode semiconductrice fonctionnant à 1.55dm. / The lack of suitable monochromatic continuous-wave terahertz source consists of one the majors hurdles for terahertz spectrum applications development in various domains. Both electronic and optic technologies don’t allow covering all terahertz electromagnetic spectrum (0.3-10 THz). In this context and in order to generate high spectral purity wave over all THz spectrum window, a well-established technique consists in the photo-mixing procedure, where an ultrafast optoelectronic device is pumped by two laser signals whose frequencies are separated by an offset in the 0.3-5 THz window. In this work, we propose a novel dual-wavelength photonic micro resonator to provide a dual-mode monolithic semiconductor laser for THz generation by photo-mixing instead of the basic photo-mixing approach based on the use of two independent lasers. The novel photonic microresonator associates a vertical Fabry Perot (FP) cavity and photonic crystal membrane (PCM)resonators. A PCM exhibiting a resonant mode at normal incidence is inserted in a FP cavity with a resonant vertical mode at the same wavelength λ0. The resulting strong optical coupling leads to the generation of two mixed modes separated by a frequency difference which can be tuned through the loss rate of the PCM and its position inside the FP cavity. The work of this thesis focuses on the design, the micro-fabrication and the characterization of the dual-frequency resonator and its application to the realization of a single compact and flexible dual-mode semiconductor laser source around 1.55μm.
29

Lasers ultra-stables asservis sur trous-brûlés spectraux : développement en vue d'une application aux horloges optiques / Ultra-stable lasers based on spectral hole burning : development toward an application for optical lattice clocks

Gobron, Olivier 03 March 2017 (has links)
Les horloges à réseau optique montrent des performances impressionnantes et sont en train de soulever la question de la redéfinition de la seconde. Dans ces systèmes, un laser ultra-stable est utilisé en tant qu’oscillateur local pour sonder des transitions optiques très étroites d’atomes neutres piégés dans un réseau optique. La stabilité ultime de ces dispositifs, déterminée par le nombre d’atomes interrogés à chaque cycle et évaluée à quelques 10−17/sqrt(tau) (où tau est le temps d’intégration), n’est actuellement pas atteinte et est limitée à quelques 10−16/sqrt(tau) par les fluctuations de phase du laser sonde. Si l’amélioration des cavités ultra-stables sur lesquels sont stabilisés les lasers sonde est largement étudiée, le LNE-SYRTE a opté pour une approche plus récente, dans laquelle la référence de fréquence utilisée est un trou brûlé spectral creusé dans un cristal dopé terres rares refroidi à température cryogénique (environ 4 K). Une stabilité court terme de quelques 10−18 pourrait alors être atteinte. Cette thèse décrit la construction de l’expérience et montre ensuite les résultats d’une étude spectroscopique à haute résolution sur des trous brûlés spectraux étroits (FWHM = 3.3 kHz) creusés dans le cristal Eu3+ : Y2SiO5. L’influence du cryostat à cycle fermé sur la stabilité des trous brûlés spectraux est notamment mise en évidence et diminuée. Enfin, une méthode d’asservissement originale basée sur une détection hétérodyne d’un trou brûlé spectral et un asservissement numérique via un FPGA qui permet de verrouiller le laser sur le sommet du trou brûlé spectral étroit est décrit et montre une stabilité court terme de quelques 10−14, ce qui est un premier résultat encourageant pour la suite du projet. / Optical lattice clocks show impressive performances and are begining to raise the question of the redefinition of the SI second. In these systems, an ultra-stable laser is used as local oscillator to probe very narrow optical transitions of neutral atoms trapped in an optical lattice. The ultime stability of these systems, determined by the number of atoms interrogated at each clock cycle, evaluated at a few 10−17/sqrt(tau) (where tau is the integration time), is currently not reached and is limited to a few 10−16/sqrt(tau) by the phase fluctuations of the probe laser. If the enhancement of the ultra-stable cavities, on which are currently stabilized the probe lasers, is widely studied, LNE-SYRTE has adopted a more recent approach where the frequency reference is a spectral hole burned in rare earth doped crystal cooled down at cryogenic temperature (around 4 K). A short term stability of a few 10−18 could be achieved. This thesis describes the construction of the experiment and present the results of a high resolution spectroscopy of narrow spectral holes (FWHM = 3.3 kHz) burned in the crystal Eu3+ : Y2SiO5. The influence of the closed cycle cryostat on the behaviour of the spectral holes is hightlighted and reduced. Finally, an original locking scheme based on a heterodyne detection of a spectral hole and a numerical lock program using FPGA in order to stabilize the laser frequency on the top of the narrow spectral hole is described and shows a short term stability of a few 10−14, which is a first promising result for the future of the project.
30

Fabrication and Characterization of Silicon Photonic Devices

Abdullah Al Noman (11251179) 11 August 2021 (has links)
Silicon photonics has become one of the leading candidates for the next generation optical communication platform. In addition to being an inexpensive material and compatible with Complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) manufacturing, silicon exhibits low absorption at optical telecommunication bands. However, high propagation loss and poor light confinement in narrow Si waveguides have limited high-density optical integration.<br>In this work, we show the fabrication and characterization of a novel type of devices named E-skid devices that can reduce the skin depth and suppress the large spatial content of evanescent light. These devices use artificial anisotropic dielectric metamaterial to suppress the evanescent waves. Beside E-skid devices, we also discuss the fabrication and experimental characterization of mode filters using Silicon on Insulator that can block the fundamental TE0 and allow the higher order modes to pass through using Multi Mode Interference.<br>In this work, the mode is filtered using radiation, not by reflection.<br>Beside Silicon, Silicon Nitride has also gained much interest because of its low loss, smaller nonlinear absorption and higher Kerr effect. Silicon Nitride waveguides have widely<br>been used for lots of applications specially the optical frequency comb generation. One special case of coherent optical frequency comb is Soliton in which case the non-linearity and dispersion cancel each other’s effect and keep the pulse without distortion. In this work, we described the Silicon Nitride fabrication process and did a comparative analysis with other research groups who fabricates similar devices. We tried to improve our process by inserting a few additional steps in our fabrication process. We also investigated our process step by step and found out reasons for our low quality factor and low yield. We found a few factors that might be responsible for the low quality factor and addressed them. We fabricated real devices using our modified process and saw improvement in quality factors, yield and thermal performance of the devices.<br>Finally, we describe an edge polishing method for Silicon Nitride microring resonator devices, which we developed from scratch and we can polish edges down to sub-micron level. Thus, the edges become optically flat and it allowed us to do heterogeneous integration with an Indium Phosphide chip. This paves away for some exciting opportunities like on-chip frequency comb generation.<br><br>

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