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Applications of spatial light modulators for optical trapping and
Applications of spatial light modulators for optical trapping and

... efficient transfer of orbital angular momentum from specific SLM generated light modes to matter. The resulting fast rotation of microparticles, the speed and sense of rotation of which can be fully computer controlled, could be used to measure physical parameters of an air-liquid interface, such as ...
Optical aberrations of intraocular lenses measured in vivo and in vitro
Optical aberrations of intraocular lenses measured in vivo and in vitro

... higher in eyes after surgery than in a group of emmetropic eyes, although higher variability in postoperative data suggested some abnormalities. Other authors have studied corneal aberration changes due to the incision, but the results are controversial. Hayashi et al.16 found significant changes in ...
`Singular Optics`, International Journal of Optics, Vol.2012
`Singular Optics`, International Journal of Optics, Vol.2012

MvR and Th.M. Nieuwenhuizen, Multiple scattering of classical
MvR and Th.M. Nieuwenhuizen, Multiple scattering of classical

... incoming and outgoing light are in exactly the same direction, the light path may be considered closed. As predicted by Barabanenkov (1973) and detected by several groups (Kuga and Ishimaru, 1985; Van Albada and Lagendijk, 1985; Wolf and Maret, 1985) the average intensity in the backscatter directio ...
Nanoconcentration of terahertz radiation in
Nanoconcentration of terahertz radiation in

Modern Optical Engineering
Modern Optical Engineering

[pdf]
[pdf]

THESIS Theoretical Study of Light Scattering by an Elliptical Cylinder
THESIS Theoretical Study of Light Scattering by an Elliptical Cylinder

Principles and techniques of digital holographic microscopy
Principles and techniques of digital holographic microscopy

... Holography was invented in 1948 by Dennis Gabor in an effort to improve the resolution of the electron microscope, where the correction of electron lens aberrations posed increasing technical difficulty. Instead of attempting to perfect the electron imaging lens, Gabor dispensed it altogether and re ...
RAY OPTICS NOTES - RIT Center for Imaging Science
RAY OPTICS NOTES - RIT Center for Imaging Science

Optical fluctuations on the transmission and reflection of mesoscopic
Optical fluctuations on the transmission and reflection of mesoscopic

... and second harmonic generated light is described. ...
Stability and Mobility of Localized and Extended Excitations in Nonlinear Schr¨
Stability and Mobility of Localized and Extended Excitations in Nonlinear Schr¨

Effect of group-delay ripples on dispersion
Effect of group-delay ripples on dispersion

... phase reversal. In Region I 共c 苷 p兲, the center frequency of the soliton is aligned with one of the minima of the dispersion ripples. The effective grating dispersion is always anomalous, i.e., b # 0, because we have chosen g , 0. When T0 is large, the dispersion varies rapidly in a pulse bandwidth. ...
Computer simulation of wave propagation through turbulent media Davis, Charles A.
Computer simulation of wave propagation through turbulent media Davis, Charles A.

Practitioner`s guide to laser pulse propagation models and simulation
Practitioner`s guide to laser pulse propagation models and simulation

Analysis And Design Of Wide-angle Foveated Optical
Analysis And Design Of Wide-angle Foveated Optical

Document
Document

Enhanced 3D spatial resolution in quantitative phase
Enhanced 3D spatial resolution in quantitative phase

... between coherent spatial illumination and incoherent spatial illumination. The axial-resolution gain is even higher as it has been shown in tomographic setups [3]. In this paper we propose to study quantitative phase imaging under any illumination spatial coherence using a quadriwave lateral shearin ...
reflection properties of a gaussian laser beam from multilayer
reflection properties of a gaussian laser beam from multilayer

... In this thesis a countermeasure to the detection of laser beam is analyzed. In order to make this possible, the reflection from dielectric stratified surfaces of a Gaussian laser beam needs to be described. The reflected beam profile of electromagnetic radiation exposes to various effects different ...
Theoretical modeling and evaluation of the axial resolution of the
Theoretical modeling and evaluation of the axial resolution of the

... observation. Brakenhoff and Muller4 discuss the advantage of a double-pass system and have shown that the full width at half maximum 共FWHM兲 of the point spread function 共PSF兲 of a double-pass system is smaller than that of a single-pass imaging system. For example, in confocal systems with small pin ...
References
References

pattern formation and competition in nonlinear optics - Ino-Cnr
pattern formation and competition in nonlinear optics - Ino-Cnr

Optical bandwidth and fabrication tolerances of multimode
Optical bandwidth and fabrication tolerances of multimode

HERE - Washington
HERE - Washington

... refraction the changing of a wave’s speed and direction as it travels into a medium (SRB, IG) research looking for work that may already have been done (IG) resolution the clarity of detail in an image (SRB, IG) reverberation the collection of closely spaced sound reflections off many surfaces (SRB ...
Patterned dielectric membranes designed for optical sensing
Patterned dielectric membranes designed for optical sensing

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Fourier optics

Fourier optics is the study of classical optics using Fourier transforms, in which the wave is regarded as a superposition of plane waves that are not related to any identifiable sources; instead they are the natural modes of the propagation medium itself. Fourier optics can be seen as the dual of the Huygens–Fresnel principle, in which the wave is regarded as a superposition of expanding spherical waves which radiate outward from actual (physically identifiable) current sources via a Green's function relationship (see Double-slit experiment)A curved phasefront may be synthesized from an infinite number of these ""natural modes"" i.e., from plane wave phasefronts oriented in different directions in space. Far from its sources, an expanding spherical wave is locally tangent to a planar phase front (a single plane wave out of the infinite spectrum), which is transverse to the radial direction of propagation. In this case, a Fraunhofer diffraction pattern is created, which emanates from a single spherical wave phase center. In the near field, no single well-defined spherical wave phase center exists, so the wavefront isn't locally tangent to a spherical ball. In this case, a Fresnel diffraction pattern would be created, which emanates from an extended source, consisting of a distribution of (physically identifiable) spherical wave sources in space. In the near field, a full spectrum of plane waves is necessary to represent the Fresnel near-field wave, even locally. A ""wide"" wave moving forward (like an expanding ocean wave coming toward the shore) can be regarded as an infinite number of ""plane wave modes"", all of which could (when they collide with something in the way) scatter independently of one other. These mathematical simplifications and calculations are the realm of Fourier analysis and synthesis – together, they can describe what happens when light passes through various slits, lenses or mirrors curved one way or the other, or is fully or partially reflected. Fourier optics forms much of the theory behind image processing techniques, as well as finding applications where information needs to be extracted from optical sources such as in quantum optics. To put it in a slightly more complex way, similar to the concept of frequency and time used in traditional Fourier transform theory, Fourier optics makes use of the spatial frequency domain (kx, ky) as the conjugate of the spatial (x,y) domain. Terms and concepts such as transform theory, spectrum, bandwidth, window functions and sampling from one-dimensional signal processing are commonly used.
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