831 research outputs found
Entangled-photon Fourier optics
Entangled photons, generated by spontaneous parametric down-conversion from a
second-order nonlinear crystal, present a rich potential for imaging and
image-processing applications. Since this source is an example of a three-wave
mixing process, there is more flexibility in the choices of illumination and
detection wavelengths and in the placement of object(s) to be imaged. Moreover,
this source is entangled, a fact that allows for imaging configurations and
capabilities that cannot be achieved using classical sources of light. In this
paper we examine a number of imaging and image-processing configurations that
can be realized using this source. The formalism that we utilize facilitates
the determination of the dependence of imaging resolution on the physical
parameters of the optical arrangement.Comment: 41 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in J. Opt. Soc. Am.
Quantum Holography
We propose to make use of quantum entanglement for extracting holographic
information about a remote 3-D object in a confined space which light enters,
but from which it cannot escape. Light scattered from the object is detected in
this confined space entirely without the benefit of spatial resolution. Quantum
holography offers this possibility by virtue of the fourth-order quantum
coherence inherent in entangled beams.Comment: 7 pages, submitted to Optics Expres
Airy wave packets accelerating in space-time
Although diffractive spreading is an unavoidable feature of all wave
phenomena, certain waveforms can attain propagation-invariance. A
lesser-explored strategy for achieving optical selfsimilar propagation exploits
the modification of the spatio-temporal field structure when observed in
reference frames moving at relativistic speeds. For such an observer, it is
predicted that the associated Lorentz boost can bring to a halt the axial
dynamics of a wave packet of arbitrary profile. This phenomenon is particularly
striking in the case of a self-accelerating beam -- such as an Airy beam --
whose peak normally undergoes a transverse displacement upon free-propagation.
Here we synthesize an acceleration-free Airy wave packet that travels in a
straight line by deforming its spatio-temporal spectrum to reproduce the impact
of a Lorentz boost. The roles of the axial spatial coordinate and time are
swapped, leading to `time-diffraction' manifested in self-acceleration observed
in the propagating Airy wave-packet frame.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Quantum Entanglement and the Two-Photon Stokes Parameters
A formalism for two-photon Stokes parameters is introduced to describe the
polarization entanglement of photon pairs. This leads to the definition of a
degree of two-photon polarization, which describes the extent to which the two
photons act as a pair and not as two independent photons. This pair-wise
polarization is complementary to the degree of polarization of the individual
photons. The approach provided here has a number of advantages over the density
matrix formalism: it allows the one- and two-photon features of the state to be
separated and offers a visualization of the mixedness of the state of
polarization.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Opt. Com
Interferometry-based modal analysis with finite aperture effects
We analyze the effects of aperture finiteness on interferograms recorded to
unveil the modal content of optical beams in arbitrary basis using generalized
interferometry. We develop a scheme for modal reconstruction from
interferometric measurements that accounts for the ensuing clipping effects.
Clipping-cognizant reconstruction is shown to yield significant performance
gains over traditional schemes that overlook such effects that do arise in
practice. Our work can inspire further research on reconstruction schemes and
algorithms that account for practical hardware limitations in a variety of
contexts
Spatial coherence of fields from generalized sources in the Fresnel regime
Analytic expressions of the spatial coherence of partially coherent fields
propagating in the Fresnel regime in all but the simplest of scenarios are
largely lacking and calculation of the Fresnel transform typically entails
tedious numerical integration. Here, we provide a closed-form approximation
formula for the case of a generalized source obtained by modulating the field
produced by a Gauss-Shell source model with a piecewise constant transmission
function, which may be used to model the field's interaction with objects and
apertures. The formula characterizes the coherence function in terms of the
coherence of the Gauss-Schell beam propagated in free space and a
multiplicative term capturing the interaction with the transmission function.
This approximation holds in the regime where the intensity width of the beam is
much larger than the coherence width under mild assumptions on the modulating
transmission function. The formula derived for generalized sources lays the
foundation for the study of the inverse problem of scene reconstruction from
coherence measurements.Comment: Accepted for publication in JOSA
On the inverse problem of source reconstruction from coherence measurements
We consider an inverse source problem for partially coherent light
propagating in the Fresnel regime. The data is the coherence of the field
measured away from the source. The reconstruction is based on a minimum residue
formulation, which uses the authors' recent closed-form approximation formula
for the coherence of the propagated field. The developed algorithms require a
small data sample for convergence and yield stable inversion by exploiting
information in the coherence as opposed to intensity-only measurements.
Examples with both simulated and experimental data demonstrate the ability of
the proposed approach to simultaneously recover complex sources in different
planes transverse to the direction of propagation
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