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The Theory of Diffraction Tomography
The Theory of Diffraction Tomography

Visualization of superluminal pulses inside a temporal transfer functions
Visualization of superluminal pulses inside a temporal transfer functions

Dynamical diffraction of atomic matter waves by crystals of light
Dynamical diffraction of atomic matter waves by crystals of light

... field inside the periodic structure as a superposition of stationary wave fields. These so-called eigenfields can be described by a superposition of plane waves as was shown by Ewald @9#. The wave vectors are restricted by the periodicity of the scattering structure to the refracted incident wave ve ...
Plane-wave scattering by a set of perfectly conducting circular
Plane-wave scattering by a set of perfectly conducting circular

PDF only - at www.arxiv.org.
PDF only - at www.arxiv.org.

Super-Resolution Fluorescence Microscopy by Structured Light
Super-Resolution Fluorescence Microscopy by Structured Light

development and verification of the non
development and verification of the non

... I am indebted to my advisors Olivier Guyon and Michael Hart for their guidance during the completion of this dissertation. It has been an honor and a privilege to work with someone of Olivier’s caliber. Every conversation with him has been full of boundless insights into optical phenomenon, wavefron ...
Deconvolution Microscopy
Deconvolution Microscopy

1 Fundamental Optics www.cvimellesgriot.com
1 Fundamental Optics www.cvimellesgriot.com

Single-Mode Optical Waveguides and
Single-Mode Optical Waveguides and

... involves the solution of the electromagnetic boundary accurate trial field [16]. This trial field enables us to devalue problem for the dielectric guiding structure. How- fine equivalent waveguiding structures consisting of slab ever, it is not possible to obtain analytical solutions of the waveguid ...
IOSR Journal of Applied Physics (IOSR-JAP)
IOSR Journal of Applied Physics (IOSR-JAP)

... molecular interactions. The RI change is related to the sample concentration, while the detection signal usually depends on the total number of analytes in the volume. As a result, the detection signal does not scale down with the sample volume. This characteristic makes label-free detection advanta ...
Optical Caustics Observed in Light Scattered by an Oblate Spheroid
Optical Caustics Observed in Light Scattered by an Oblate Spheroid

... for p ¼ 2 scattering in the vicinity of the rainbow, rays with positive Δ are closer to the backscattering direction than is the central ray. We also consider a second set of rectangular coordinates rotated clockwise in the zx plane with respect to the original coordinate system by the angle Θ0 . Th ...
A correlation of thin lens approximation to thick
A correlation of thin lens approximation to thick

... where i is the image distance and o is the object distance. Each value of P indicates the location of the usage of the lens in the optical system. As seen in Eqs. (2.a) and (2.b), the spherical aberration and coma of the lens depend on CSF’s and CPF’s. On the other hand, the coefficients of astigmat ...
et al.
et al.

... An octave-spanning spectrum allows comb position to be readily stabilized ...
320 KB
320 KB

... T denotes the transpose operation and i stands for the imaginary unit. Based on the energy conservation law, the Onsager–Casimir principle of kinetic coefficients symmetry and on the crystallographic symmetry, fundamental properties of the material tensors , µ and α were determined [4], [6–14]. Possi ...
Selective Trapping or Rotation of Isotropic Dielectric Microparticles
Selective Trapping or Rotation of Isotropic Dielectric Microparticles

... onto the spiral sample using an aspherical double-convex focusing lens (focal length = 5 cm, LB1471-C-N-BK7, Thorlabs). Under such soft focusing condition, the illumination spot (1/e2 diameter of 20 μm) fully covers one single PAS (diameter of 11.325 μm) and the circularly polarized light can be saf ...
Fourier Transforms and Images
Fourier Transforms and Images

... This analysis tells us that a sine modulation - produced by the sample with a period d, will produce scattered beams at angles q, where d and q are related by 2d sin q  l we have seen this before ...
Electromagnetic wave scatterings by anisotropic metamaterials
Electromagnetic wave scatterings by anisotropic metamaterials

Planar second-harmonic generation with noncollinear pumps in
Planar second-harmonic generation with noncollinear pumps in

Chapter 6.doc
Chapter 6.doc

Ocean wave slope from polarimetric imaging
Ocean wave slope from polarimetric imaging

Disorder-Enhanced Imaging with Spatially Controlled Light
Disorder-Enhanced Imaging with Spatially Controlled Light

Focal shift of silicon microlen array in mid
Focal shift of silicon microlen array in mid

File
File

... best image. The distance Im IP, measures the longitudinal spherical aberration. The radius of the circle of least confusion measures the lateral spherical aberration. When the aperture of the lens is relatively large compared to the focal length of the lens, the come of the rays of light refracted t ...
Physic
Physic

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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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