7 research outputs found

    Backpropagation Imaging in Nonlinear Harmonic Holography in the Presence of Measurement and Medium Noises

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    In this paper, the detection of a small reflector in a randomly heterogenous medium using second-harmonic generation is investigated. The medium is illuminated by a time-harmonic plane wave at frequency omega. It is assumed that the reflector has a non-zero second-order nonlinear susceptibility, and thus emits a wave at frequency two omega in addition to the fundamental frequency linear scattering. It is shown how the fundamental frequency signal and the second-harmonic signal propagate in the medium. A statistical study of the images obtained by migrating the boundary data is performed. It is proved that the second-harmonic image is more stable with respect to medium noise than the one obtained with the fundamental signal. Moreover, the signal-to-noise ratio for the second-harmonic image does not depend neither on the second-order susceptibility tensor nor on the volume of the particle.Comment: 36 pages, 18 figure

    Backpropagation Imaging in Nonlinear Harmonic Holography in the Presence of Measurement and Medium Noises

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    In this paper, the detection of a small reflector in a randomly heterogeneous medium using secondharmonic generation is investigated. The medium is illuminated by a time-harmonic plane wave at frequency ω. It is assumed that the reflector has a nonzero second-order nonlinear susceptibility, and thus emits a wave at frequency 2ω in addition to the fundamental frequency linear scattering. It is shown how the fundamental frequency signal and the second-harmonic signal propagate in the medium. A statistical study of the images obtained by migrating the boundary data is performed. It is proved that the second-harmonic image is more stable with respect to medium noise than the one obtained with the fundamental signal. Moreover, the signal-to-noise ratio for the second-harmonic image does not depend either on the second-order susceptibility tensor or on the volume of the particle. © 2014 Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics

    Surface Plasmon Resonance of Nanoparticles and Applications in Imaging

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    In this paper we provide a mathematical framework for localized plasmon resonance of nanoparticles. Using layer potential techniques associated with the full Maxwell equations, we derive small-volume expansions for the electromagnetic fields, which are uniformly valid with respect to the nanoparticle's bulk electron relaxation rate. Then, we discuss the scattering and absorption enhancements by plasmon resonant nanoparticles. We study both the cases of a single and multiple nanoparticles. We present numerical simulations of the localized surface plasmonic resonances associated to multiple particles in terms of their separation distance

    Nonlinear Wave Propagation and Imaging in Deterministic and Random Media

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    This thesis consists of three projects that attempt to understand and identify applications for optical scattering from small nonlinear scatterers. In the first part of the thesis we consider the direct scattering problem from a collection of small nonlinear scatterers. We considered all common types of quadratic and cubic nonlinearities within the scalar wave theory. We assume that the scatterers are small compared to the incident wavelength, thus the Lippman-Schwinger integral equations can be converted to algebraic equations. We further assume that the nonlinearity is weak, thus the scattering amplitudes can be calculated by solving the algebraic equations perturbatively. We apply this method to explore the redistribution of energy among the frequency components of the field, the modifications of scattering resonances and the mechanism of optical bistability for the Kerr nonlinearity. In the second part of the thesis we generalized the optical theorem to nonlinear scattering processes. The optical theorem is a conservation law which has only been shown to hold in linear media. We show that the optical theorem holds exactly for polarizations as arbitrary functions of the electric field, which includes nonlinear media as a special case. As an application, we develop a model for apertureless near-field scanning optical microscopy. We model the sample as a collection of small linear scatterers, and introduce a nonlinear metallic scatterer as the near-field tip. We show that this imaging method is background-free and achieves subwavelength resolution. This work is done for the full Maxwell model. In the third part of the thesis we consider the imaging of small nonlinear scatterers in random media. We analyze the problem of locating small nonlinear scatterers in weakly scattering random media which respond linearly to light. We show that for propagation distances within a few transport mean free paths, we can obtain robust images using the coherent interferometry (CINT) imaging functions. We also show that imaging the quadratic susceptibility with CINT yields better result, because that the CINT imaging function for the linear susceptibility has noisy peaks in a region that depends on the geometry of the aperture and the cone of incident directions.PHDApplied and Interdisciplinary MathematicsUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/135746/1/leewei_1.pd
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