Optical vortices 30 years on: OAM manipulation from topological charge to multiple singularities
TL;DR: The authors survey the steady refinement of techniques used to create optical vortices, and explore their applications, which include sophisticated optical computing processes, novel microscopy and imaging techniques, the creation of ‘optical tweezers’ to trap particles of matter, and optical machining using light to pattern structures on the nanoscale.
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Abstract: Thirty years ago, Coullet et al. proposed that a special optical field exists in laser cavities bearing some analogy with the superfluid vortex. Since then, optical vortices have been widely studied, inspired by the hydrodynamics sharing similar mathematics. Akin to a fluid vortex with a central flow singularity, an optical vortex beam has a phase singularity with a certain topological charge, giving rise to a hollow intensity distribution. Such a beam with helical phase fronts and orbital angular momentum reveals a subtle connection between macroscopic physical optics and microscopic quantum optics. These amazing properties provide a new understanding of a wide range of optical and physical phenomena, including twisting photons, spin-orbital interactions, Bose-Einstein condensates, etc., while the associated technologies for manipulating optical vortices have become increasingly tunable and flexible. Hitherto, owing to these salient properties and optical manipulation technologies, tunable vortex beams have engendered tremendous advanced applications such as optical tweezers, high-order quantum entanglement, and nonlinear optics. This article reviews the recent progress in tunable vortex technologies along with their advanced applications.
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Citations
Methods and Applications
Ajit Varki,Richard D Cummings,Jeffrey D. Esko,Hudson Freeze,Pamela Stanley,Carolyn R. Bertozzi,Gerald W. Hart,Marilynn E. Etzler +7 more
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TL;DR: The aim of the research presented in this thesis is to create new methods for design for manufacturing, by using several approaches of KE, and find the beneficial and less beneficial aspects of these methods in comparison to each other and earlier research.
749
Optical trapping with structured light: a review
Yuanjie Yang,Yu-Xuan Ren,Mingzhou Chen,Yoshihiko Arita,Yoshihiko Arita,Carmelo Rosales-Guzmán,Carmelo Rosales-Guzmán +6 more
- 03 Jun 2021
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarize the recent advances in the field of optical tweezers using structured light beams with customized phase, amplitude, and polarization in 3D optical trapping.
Photonic Quantum Metrology
Emanuele Polino,Mauro Valeri,Nicolò Spagnolo,Fabio Sciarrino +3 more
- 29 Jun 2020
TL;DR: This work discusses the current experimental and theoretical challenges, and the open questions towards implementation of photonic quantum sensors with quantum-enhanced performances in the presence of noise, in the research area of multiparameter quantum metrology, where multiple parameters have to be estimated at the same time.
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Maxwell Meets Marangoni—A Review of Theories on Laser-Induced Periodic Surface Structures
Jörn Bonse,Stephan Gräf +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the available literature on laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS, ripples) along with their numerical implementations and a comparison and critical assessment of these approaches is provided.
References
The q-plate and its future
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that a free material particle absorbs light having spin or twist, it is itself made to spin, in other words, the light exerts a rotational form of radiation pressure.
Stable Vortex Tori in the Three-Dimensional Cubic-Quintic Ginzburg-Landau Equation
Dumitru Mihalache,Dumitru Mihalache,Dumitru Mazilu,Falk Lederer,Yaroslav V. Kartashov,Lucian-Cornel Crasovan,Lluis Torner,Boris A. Malomed +7 more
TL;DR: The results provide the first example of stable vortex tori in a 3D dissipative medium, as well as the first examples of higher-order tori (with S=2) in any nonlinear medium.
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