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Optical forces on particles of arbitrary shape and size
Optical forces on particles of arbitrary shape and size

... memory and cpu time. In this case, it would be more practical to use an established optic-ray method by Ashkin [8] or others [19] to find the optical force. We have worked with plane waves and Gaussian fields of different waists, though other fields are possible. From an optical trapping standpoint, ...
mm {0.84 M PASS
mm {0.84 M PASS

... can be selected. For instance, AlxGa1_xAS (x=0 to receives long-wavelength optical wave energy is de 0.32) can be used as a ?lter between radiation of >\=0.9 signed to pass long-wavelength optical wave energy 30 and 0.7 micrometers InxGa1_xAs (x=0 to 1.0) between and reject short-wavelength optical ...
self-study - Technion moodle
self-study - Technion moodle

... at the Standard Telecommunication Laboratories in England in the 1960s. ...
PowerPoint 簡報
PowerPoint 簡報

... Fundamentals of Optics Jiun-You Lin Department of Mechatronics Engineering, National Changhua University of Education ...
Hanan khaled Mofty
Hanan khaled Mofty

Spherical Mirrors
Spherical Mirrors

Mirrors
Mirrors

THE FARADAY AND KERR EFFECTS The Faraday and Kerr Effects
THE FARADAY AND KERR EFFECTS The Faraday and Kerr Effects

... experiment, trying to prove that an electric field could also affect the polarization of passing through a transparent material. After using an assortment of mediums, including liquids and solids such as glass, he demonstrated the electro-optic effect. Michael Faraday was an English chemist and phys ...
AP Physics Ch 24 : Physical Optics
AP Physics Ch 24 : Physical Optics

... Light from different ends of the slit will be traveling to the same spot on the screen and reach there either in or out of sync. o In Figure 7, the blue path has to travel further than the red path... if this difference is equal to half a wavelength, they will meet each other out of sync. If they me ...
Info Note 804: UV-VIS Nomenclature and Units
Info Note 804: UV-VIS Nomenclature and Units

... transparent cell, known as a cuvette. Cuvettes are typically rectangular in shape, commonly with an internal width of 1 cm. (This width becomes the path length, L, in the Beer-Lambert law.) Test tubes can also be used as cuvettes in some instruments. The best cuvettes are made of high quality quartz ...
ECE_427_2D_Fourier_a.. - University of Illinois at Chicago
ECE_427_2D_Fourier_a.. - University of Illinois at Chicago

... However, in some practical cases we observe images that contain parallel lines and certain fixed spacing. Recalling our previous interpretation of the direction of an elementary wave and the spacing between wavefront lines, we are tempted to associate the values of (fx,fy) to a certain region of an ...
Default Normal Template
Default Normal Template

FT-IR Glossary - Thermo Fisher Scientific
FT-IR Glossary - Thermo Fisher Scientific

PowerPoint 簡報
PowerPoint 簡報

“The Rayleigh range of Gaussian Schell
“The Rayleigh range of Gaussian Schell

Measuring the Modulation Transfer Function of
Measuring the Modulation Transfer Function of

... produce a sinewave target is the most difficult. The quality of the target is very important to the accuracy of the measurement. ...
Modal and Material Dispersion
Modal and Material Dispersion

... • Solution V0.82m  (2a /  ) n12  n22  (2 25 / 0.82) 1.482 1.462  46.45 ...
Tech Notes Wavelength 2012 | www.ll.mit.edu
Tech Notes Wavelength 2012 | www.ll.mit.edu

Direct measurement of standing evanescent waves with a photon
Direct measurement of standing evanescent waves with a photon

... permit determining the width of the gap without touching the surface by the tip. So far we have discussed only standing evanescent waves caused by the interference of two counterpropagating waves of identical wavelength. Operating the Ar-ion laser on all lines leads to a standing evanescent wave tha ...
2 Pulsed Optics
2 Pulsed Optics

... particle description is discrete. In our classical culture these two visions are antithetical and one cannot be reduced to the other. Nowadays physics says and experiments show that light is both continuous and discrete. In the particle description light is made of photons, energy packets equal to t ...
United Nations
United Nations

... the changes to be introduced in the various lamp Regulations (No. 4, 6, 7, etc.) could not be presented to the GRE in time before they were “frozen”. Consequently the changes contained in the present document have been prepared to be directly introduced in the new Regulation for “Light signalling de ...
Through the Looking Glass
Through the Looking Glass

... physical process that alters the refractive index in a region of a material will, in turn, alter the phase of any light passing through that region. The trick, of course, is to alter the refractive index in just the right way so that the material scatters the light wave into its conjugate. To furthe ...
In the diagram below, the optical train of a set of binoculars is found
In the diagram below, the optical train of a set of binoculars is found

Dependences of the group velocity for
Dependences of the group velocity for

... throughput performance in optical-telecommunication systems. Most pulse durations reported in previous study are of the order of millisecond to picosecond region. Group velocity control of femtosecond pulses was also demonstrated through χ (2) cascading interactions in quasiphase-match (QPM) grating ...
SPDM: light microscopy with single
SPDM: light microscopy with single

... are used for this method are fluorescent markers which are chemically modified (e.g. by adding appropriate side groups) in such a way that most of them are initially in an inactive state for the fluorescence excitation at a given wavelength λexc . This state (i.e. a ‘dark’ spectral signature with re ...
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Harold Hopkins (physicist)

Harold Horace Hopkins FRS (1918–1994) was a renowned British physicist. His Wave Theory of Aberrations, (published by Oxford University Press 1950), is central to all modern optical design and provides the mathematical analysis which enables the use of computers to create the wealth of high quality lenses available today. In addition to his theoretical work, his many inventions are in daily use throughout the world. These include zoom lenses, coherent fibre-optics and more recently the rod-lens endoscopes which 'opened the door' to modern key-hole surgery. He was the recipient of many of the world's most prestigious awards and was twice nominated for a Nobel Prize. His citation on receiving the Rumford Medal from the Royal Society in 1984 stated: ""In recognition of his many contributions to the theory and design of optical instruments, especially of a wide variety of important new medical instruments which have made a major contribution to clinical diagnosis and surgery.""
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