photomixing
Photomixing is a technique in photonics where two optical fields of different frequencies are combined in a fast photodetector or photoconductive material to produce an electrical signal whose frequency equals the difference of the optical frequencies. When two lasers with frequencies f1 and f2 illuminate a photoconductive device biased with a DC voltage, the resulting photocurrent contains a component at Δf = |f1 − f2|. If Δf lies in the terahertz range, the process can generate or detect terahertz radiation.
Mechanism: The two lasers create a time-varying carrier density through interference, producing an optical beat at
Applications: Photomixing provides compact, tunable sources of terahertz radiation and enables coherent THz detection for spectroscopy,
Limitations: Output power is typically modest and rises with optical power and carrier mobility, while coherence