841 research outputs found

    On-chip spectropolarimetry by fingerprinting with random surface arrays of nanoparticles

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    Optical metasurfaces revolutionized the approach to moulding the propagation of light by enabling simultaneous control of the light phase, momentum, amplitude and polarization. Thus, instantaneous spectropolarimetry became possible by conducting parallel intensity measurements of differently diffracted optical beams. Various implementations of this very important functionality have one feature in common - the determination of wavelength utilizes dispersion of the diffraction angle, requiring tracking the diffracted beams in space. Realization of on-chip spectropolarimetry calls thereby for conceptually different approaches. In this work, we demonstrate that random nanoparticle arrays on metal surfaces, enabling strong multiple scattering of surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs), produce upon illumination complicated SPP scattered patterns, whose angular spectra are uniquely determined by the polarization and wavelength of light, representing thereby spectropolarimetric fingerprints. Using um-sized circular arrays of randomly distributed {\mu}m-sized gold nanoparticles (density ~ 75 {\mu}m^-2^2}) fabricated on gold films, we measure angular distributions of scattered SPP waves using the leakage radiation microscopy and find that the angular SPP spectra obtained for normally incident light beams different in wavelength and/or polarization are distinctly different. Our approach allows one to realize on-chip spectropolarimetry by fingerprinting using surface nanostructures fabricated with simple one-step electron-beam lithography.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure

    Single function crystalline lens capable of mimicking ciliary body accommodation

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    The lens is a complex optical component of the human eye because of its physiological structure: the surface is aspherical and the structural entities create a gradient refractive index (GRIN). Most existent models of the lens deal with its external shape independently of the refractive index and, subsequently, through optimization processes, adjust the imaging properties. In this paper, we propose a physiologically realistic GRIN model of the lens based on a single function for the whole lens that accurately describes different accommodative states simultaneously providing the corresponding refractive index distribution and the external shape of the lens by changing a single parameter that we associate with the function of the ciliary body. This simple, but highly accurate model, is incorporated into a schematic eye constructed with reported experimental biometric data and accommodation is simulated over a range of 0 to 6 diopters to select the optimum levels of image quality. Changes with accommodation in equatorial and total axial lens thicknesses, as well as aberrations, are found to lie within reported biometric data range

    White light generation and anisotropic damage in gold films near percolation threshold

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    Strongly enhanced and confined electromagnetic fields generated in metal nanostructures upon illumination are exploited in many emerging technologies by either fabricating sophisticated nanostructures or synthesizing colloid nanoparticles. Here we study effects driven by field enhancement in vanishingly small gaps between gold islands in thin films near the electrically determined percolation threshold. Optical explorations using two-photon luminescence (TPL) and near-field microscopies reveals super-cubic TPL power dependencies with white-light spectra, establishing unequivocally that the strongest TPL signals are generated with close to the percolation threshold films, and occurrence of extremely confined (~ 30 nm)and strongly enhanced (~ 100 times) fields at the illumination wavelength. For linearly polarized and sufficiently powerful light, we observe pronounced optical damage with TPL images being sensitive to both wavelength and polarization of illuminating light. We relate these effects to thermally induced morphological changes observed with scanning electron microscopy images. Fascinating physics involved in light interaction with near-percolation metal films along with their straightforward and scalable one-step fabrication procedure promises a wide range of fascinating developments and technological applications within diverse areas of modern nanotechnology, from bio-molecule optical sensing to ultra-dense optical data storage.Comment: 42 pages in total of the main (27 pages) and supplementary (15 pages) material with 4 main and 10 supplementary figure

    Engineering nanoparticles with pure high-order multipole scattering

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    The ability to control scattering directionality of nanoparticles is in high demand for many nanophotonic applications. One of the challenges is to design nanoparticles producing pure high-order multipole scattering (e.g., octopole, hexadecapole), whose contribution is usually negligible compared to strong low-order multipole scattering (i.e., dipole or quadrupole). Here we present an intuitive way to design such nanoparticles by introducing a void inside them. We show that both shell and ring nanostructures allow regimes with nearly pure high-order multipole scattering. Experimentally measured scattering diagrams from properly designed silicon rings at near-infrared wavelengths (~ 800 nm) reproduce well scattering patterns of an electric octopole and magnetic hexadecapole. Our findings advance significantly inverse engineering of nanoparticles from given complex scattering characteristics, with possible applications in biosensing, optical metasurfaces, and quantum communications.Comment: Submitted to ACS Photonic

    Factors controlling the community structure of picoplankton in contrasting marine environments

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    The effect of inorganic nutrients on planktonic assemblages has traditionally relied on concentrations rather than estimates of nutrient supply. We combined a novel dataset of hydrographic properties, turbulent mixing, nutrient concentration, and picoplankton community composition with the aims of (i) quantifying the role of temperature, light, and nitrate fluxes as factors controlling the distribution of autotrophic and heterotrophic picoplankton subgroups, as determined by flow cytometry, and (ii) describing the ecological niches of the various components of the picoplankton community. Data were collected at 97 stations in the Atlantic Ocean, including tropical and subtropical open-ocean waters, the northwestern Mediterranean Sea, and the Galician coastal upwelling system of the northwest Iberian Peninsula. A generalized additive model (GAM) approach was used to predict depth-integrated biomass of each picoplankton subgroup based on three niche predictors: sea surface temperature, averaged daily surface irradiance, and the transport of nitrate into the euphotic zone, through both diffusion and advection. In addition, niche overlap among different picoplankton subgroups was computed using nonparametric kernel density functions. Temperature and nitrate supply were more relevant than light in predicting the biomass of most picoplankton subgroups, except for Prochlorococcus and low-nucleic-acid (LNA) prokaryotes, for which irradiance also played a significant role. Nitrate supply was the only factor that allowed the distinction among the ecological niches of all autotrophic and heterotrophic picoplankton subgroups. Prochlorococcus and LNA prokaryotes were more abundant in warmer waters ( \u3e 20°C) where the nitrate fluxes were low, whereas Synechococcus and high-nucleic-acid (HNA) prokaryotes prevailed mainly in cooler environments characterized by intermediate or high levels of nitrate supply. Finally, the niche of picoeukaryotes was defined by low temperatures and high nitrate supply. These results support the key role of nitrate supply, as it not only promotes the growth of large phytoplankton, but it also controls the structure of marine picoplankton communities

    Occurrence of spontaneous tetraploid nucellar mango plants

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    A putative polyploid seedling tree appeared among the polyembryonic mango (Mangifera indica L.) ‘Gomera-1’, widely used as a rootstock in the Canary Islands. Initially detected because of its wider and more coriaceous leaves, further studies showed that fruit from this seedling are considerably larger than normal, although all other fruit characteristics (including polyembryony) were similar to those of standard ‘Gomera-1’ (G-1) fruit. The progeny of this plant has, to date, proved to be morphologically identical to the mother plant. Studies of seedlings from normal G-1 trees growing in the same orchard showed that 10% of the plants had morphological characteristics similar to those of the putative polyploid seedling. Flow cytometry and chromosome count analyses confirmed that G-1 is diploid, whereas the putative polyploid is a stable tetraploid. The study also showed that the morphologically abnormal seedlings from diploid parent trees were spontaneous tetraploids

    Nutrient supply does play a role on the structure of marine picophytoplankton communities

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    Conference communicationThe Margalef´s mandala (1978) is a simplified bottom-up control model that explains how mixing and nutrient concentration determine the composition of marine phytoplankton communities. Due to the difficulties of measuring turbulence in the field, previous attempts to verify this model have applied different proxies for nutrient supply, and very often used interchangeably the terms mixing and stratification. Moreover, because the mandala was conceived before the discovery of smaller phytoplankton groups (picoplankton <2 µm), it describes only the succession of vegetative phases of microplankton. In order to test the applicability of the classical mandala to picoplankton groups, we used a multidisciplinary approach including specifically designed field observations supported by remote sensing, database analyses, and modeling and laboratory chemostat experiments. Simultaneous estimates of nitrate diffusive fluxes, derived from microturbulence observations, and picoplankton abundance collected in more than 200 stations, spanning widely different hydrographic regimes, showed that the contribution of eukaryotes to picoautotrophic biomass increases with nutrient supply, whereas that of picocyanobacteria shows the opposite trend. These findings were supported by laboratory and modeling chemostat experiments that reproduced the competitive dynamics between picoeukaryote sand picocyanobacteria as a function of changing nutrient supply. Our results indicate that nutrient supply controls the distribution of picoplankton functional groups in the ocean, further supporting the model proposed by Margalef.Spanish Governmen
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