5 research outputs found

    Media 3: Devil’s lens optical tweezers

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    Originally published in Optics Express on 06 April 2015 (oe-23-7-8190

    Visualization 1: Tight focusing of femtosecond radially polarized light pulses through a dielectric interface

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    The propagation evolution of the radially polarized, ultrashort pulsed laser beams. Originally published in JOSA A on 01 September 2015 (josaa-32-9-1717

    Visualization 1: Generation of stochastic electromagnetic beams with complete controllable coherence

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    Dynamic pattern with modulation magnitude 0.5 Originally published in Optics Express on 19 September 2016 (oe-24-19-21587

    Visualization 1: Modeling the ponderomotive interaction of high-power laser beams with collisional plasma: the FDTD-based approach

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    Gaussian beam propagating in free space Originally published in Optics Express on 03 April 2017 (oe-25-7-8440

    Single-shot recognition of orbital angular momentum from speckles with spatially multiplexed point detection (SMPD)

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    The widely adopted optical information detection strategies nowadays can be roughly classified into spatial-resolve-based and time-sequence-based methods. The former is highly reliant on detectors with spatial resolution that works in a limited spectrum range to capture the intensity distribution of the object, whereas the latter employs single-pixel detectors (SPDs) with improved reliability and stability in detection at the expense of time consumption due to sequential intensity recording. However, there is a scarcity of research on using high-performance SPDs for single-shot object information detection. To capture and extract features of objects efficiently and economically, in this work, we propose a single-shot optical information-detecting method, tentatively named spatially multiplexed point detection (SMPD) technology, in which some SPDs are randomly distributed at different locations to acquire the information of the object. To validate the validity of the proposed method, we demonstrate high-fidelity recognition of orbital angular momentum (OAM) modes from speckle patterns generated by the transmission of two orthogonally polarized vortex beams through a multimode fiber. It is feasible to apply this approach in wide applications, such as image transmission based on multiplexed-OAM decoding and recognizing hand-written digits. Compared with traditional image recognition methods, the new approach yields a recognition accuracy of over 98% with an effective detection area that is only 0.02% of its counterparts. With further engineering, the proposed method may spur many exciting developments in OAM-based optical communication systems, image classification, object detections, and other optical information detections
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