Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
I set out to write this book in the firm belief that a truly introductory text on nonlinear optics was not only needed, but would also be quite easy to write. Over the years, I have frequently been asked by new graduate students to recommend an introductory book on nonlinear optics, but have found myself at a loss. There are of course a number of truly excellent books on the subject – Robert Boyd's Nonlinear Optics, now in its 3rd edition [1], is particularly noteworthy – but none of them seems to me to provide the gentle lead-in that the absolute beginner would appreciate.
In the event, I found it a lot harder to maintain an introductory flavour than I had expected. I quickly discovered that there are aspects of the subject that are hard to write about at all without going into depth. One of my aims at the outset was to cover as much of the subject as possible without getting bogged down in crystallography, the tensor structure of the nonlinear coefficients, and the massive perturbation theory formulae that result when one tries to calculate the coefficients quantum mechanically. This at least I largely managed to achieve in the final outcome. As far as possible, I have fenced off the ‘difficult’ bits of the subject, so that six of the ten chapters are virtually ‘tensor-free’.
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