247 research outputs found
Improved theory for the polarization-dependent transverse shift of a paraxial light beam in free space
Spatial distribution of the longitudinal field component of a circularly
polarized optical beam depends on the polarization handedness, which causes the
lateral shift of the beam "center of gravity" when its polarization toggles. We
present the generalized theory of this effect, which demonstrates its relation
with the angular irradiance moments of the beam. The theory is applicable to
arbitrary paraxial beams and shows that the lateral shift is the same for all
cross sections of the beam.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures. The paper is submitted to Ukr. J. Phys. Opt. It
contains the refined and generalized theory of the effect first observed and
explained by B. Zel'dovich et al. in 1994: polarizxation-dependent transverse
shift of the focal spot obtained by focusing an asymmetric light bea
Subwavelength particles in an inhomogeneous light field: Optical forces associated with the spin and orbital energy flows
We analyze the ponderomotive action experienced by a small spherical particle
immersed in an optical field, in relation to the internal energy flows (optical
currents) and their spin and orbital constituents. The problem is studied
analytically, based on the dipole model, and numerically. Three sources of the
field mechanical action - energy density gradient and the orbital and spin
parts of the energy flow - differ by the ponderomotive mechanism, and their
physical nature manifests itself in the optical force dependence on the
particle radius a. If a is much less than the radiation wavelength, the optical
force behaves as a^n and integer n can be used to classify the sources of the
mechanical action. This classification correlates with the multipole
representation of the field-particle interaction: The gradient force and the
orbital-momentum force appear due to the electric or magnetic dipole moments
per se, the spin-momentum force emerges due to interaction between the electric
and magnetic dipoles or between the dipole and quadruple moments (if the
particle is polarisable electrically but not magnetically or vice versa). In
principle, the spin and orbital currents can be measured separately by the
probe particle motion, employing the special choice of particles with necessary
magnetic and/or electric properties.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures. The paper represents materials of the talk at
conference "Singular Optics'12" in Sevastopol, 19 September 2012, and is
designed to "Journal of Optics
Arrays of optical vortices formed by "fork" holograms
Singular light beams with optical vortices (OV) are often generated by means
of thin binary gratings with groove bifurcation ("fork holograms") that produce
a set of diffracted beams with different OV charges. Usually, only single
separate beams are used and investigated; here we consider the whole set of
diffracted OV beams that, at certain conditions, are involved in efficient
mutual interference to form a characteristic pattern where the ring-like
structure of separate OV beams is replaced by series of bright and dark lines
between adjacent diffraction orders. This pattern, well developed for high
diffraction orders, reflects the main spatial properties of the diffracted
beams as well as of the fork grating used for their generation. In particular,
it confirms the theoretical model for the diffracted beams (Kummer beam model)
and enables to determine the sign and the absolute value of the phase
singularity embedded in the hologram.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Effects of misalignments in the optical vortex transformation performed by holograms with embedded phase singularity
Spatial characteristics of diffracted beams produced by a "fork" hologram
from an incident circular Laguerre-Gaussian beam whose axis differ from the
hologram optical axis are studied theoretically. General analytical
representations for the complex amplitude distribution of a diffracted beam are
derived in terms of superposition of Kummer beams or hypergeometric-Gaussian
beams. The diffracted beam structure is determined by combination of the
"proper" topological charge m of the incident vortex beam and the topological
charge l of the singularity "imparted" by the hologram. Evolution of the
diffracted beam structure is studied in detail for several combinations of m
and l and for various incident beam displacements with respect to the optical
axis of the hologram. Variations of the intensity and phase distribution due to
the incident beam misalignment are investigated and possible applications for
the purposeful optical-vortex beam generation and optical measurements are
discussed.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure
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