27 research outputs found
Higher-order moments and overlaps of Cartesian beams
We introduce a closed-form expression for the overlap between two different Cartesian beams. In the course of obtaining this expression, we establish a linear relation between the overlap of circular beams with azimuthal symmetry and the overlap of Cartesian beams such that the knowledge of the former allows the latter to be calculated very easily. Our formalism can be easily applied to calculate relevant beam parameters such as the normalization constants, the M2 factors, the kurtosis parameters, the expansion coefficients of Cartesian beams, and therefore of all their relevant special cases, including the standard, elegant, and generalized Hermite–Gaussian beams, cosh-Gaussian beams, Lorentz beams, and Airy beams, among others
Deciphering Pancharatnam's discovery of geometric phase
While Pancharatnam discovered the geometric phase in 1956, his work was not
widely recognized until its endorsement by Berry in 1987, after which it
received wide appreciation. However, because Pancharatnam's paper is unusually
difficult to follow, his work has often been misinterpreted as referring to an
evolution of states of polarization, just as Berry's work focused on a cycle of
states, even though this consideration does not appear in Pancharatnam's work.
We walk the reader through Pancharatnam's original derivation and show how
Pancharatnam's approach connects to recent work in geometric phase. It is our
hope to make this widely cited classic paper more accessible and better
understood
Frequency correlation requirements on the biphoton wavefunction in an induced coherence experiment between separate sources
There is renewed interest in using the coherence between beams generated in
separate down-converter sources for new applications in imaging, spectroscopy,
microscopy and optical coherence tomography (OCT). These schemes make use of
continuous wave (CW) pumping in the low parametric gain regime, which produces
frequency correlations, and frequency entanglement, between signal-idler pairs
generated in each single source. But can induced coherence still be observed if
there is no frequency correlation, so the biphoton wavefunction is factorable?
We will show that this is the case, and this might be an advantage for OCT
applications. High axial resolution requires a large bandwidth. For CW pumping
this requires the use of short nonlinear crystals. This is detrimental since
short crystals generate small photon fluxes. We show that the use of ultrashort
pump pulses allows improving axial resolution even for long crystal that
produce higher photon fluxes
Wave description of geometric phase
Since Pancharatnam's 1956 discovery of optical geometric phase, and Berry's
1984 discovery of geometric phase in quantum systems, researchers analyzing
geometric phase have focused almost exclusively on algebraic approaches using
the Jones calculus, or on spherical trigonometry approaches using the
Poincar\'e sphere. The abstracted mathematics of the former, and the abstracted
geometry of the latter, obscure the physical mechanism that generates geometric
phase. We show that optical geometric phase derives entirely from the
superposition of waves and the resulting shift in the location of the wave
maximum. This wave-based model provides a way to visualize how geometric phase
arises from relationships between waves, and from the transformations induced
by optical elements. We also derive the relationship between the geometric
phase of a wave by itself and the phase exhibited by an interferogram, and
provide the conditions under which the two match one another
Propagation of Whittaker-Gaussian beams
We study the propagating and shaping characteristics of the novel Whittaker-Gaussian beams (WGB). The transverse profile is described by the Whittaker functions. Their physical characteristics are studied in detail by finding the 2n-order intensity moments of the beam. Propagation through complex ABCD optical systems, normalization factor, beamwidth, the quality M^2 factor and its kurtosis parameter are derived. We discuss its behavior for different beam parameters and the relation between them. The WGBs carry finite power and form a biorthogonal set of solutions of the paraxial wave equation (PWE) in circular cylindrical coordinates