1,608 research outputs found

    Relative limitations of increasing the number of modulation levels in computer generated holography

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    Phase and amplitude spatial light modulators (SLMs) capable of both binary and multi-level modulation are widely available and offer a wide range of technologies to choose from for holographic applications. While the replay fields generated with multi-level phase-only SLMs are of a significantly higher quality than those generated by equivalent binary phase-only SLMs, evidence is presented in this letter that this improvement is not as marked for amplitude SLMs, where multi-level devices offer only a small benefit over their binary counterparts. Heuristic and numerical justifications for this are discussed and conclusions drawn

    Holographic Predictive Search: Extending the scope

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    Holographic Predictive Search (HPS) is a novel approach to search-based hologram generation that uses a mathematical understanding of the optical transforms to make informed optimisation decisions. Existing search techniques such as Direct Search (DS) and Simulated Annealing (SA) rely on trialling modifications to a test hologram and observing the results. A formula is used to decide whether the change should be accepted. HPS operates presciently, using knowledge of the underlying mathematical relationship to make exact changes to the test hologram that guarantee the'best’ outcome for that change. In this work, we extend the scope of the original research to cover both phase and amplitude modulating Spatial Light Modulators (SLMs), both phase sensitive and phase insensitive systems and both Fresnel and Fraunhofer diffraction. In the cases discussed, improvements of up to 10x are observed in final error and the approach also offers significant performance benefits in generation time. This comes at the expense of increased complexity and loss of generality

    Single-Step Fabrication of Multispectral Filter Arrays Using Grayscale Lithography and Metal-Insulator-Metal Geometry

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    © 2018 OSA. Metal-insulator-metal geometries can provide optical transmission filtering, with peak wavelength dependent on insulator thickness. Using grayscale electron beam lithography to control insulator thickness, we fabricate multispectral filter arrays, whereby dose determines wavelength

    Coherent Imaging through Multicore Fibres with Applications in Endoscopy

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    Imaging through optical fibres has recently emerged as a promising method of micro-scale optical imaging within a hair-thin form factor. This has significant applications in endoscopy and may enable minimally invasive imaging deep within live tissue for improved diagnosis of disease. Multi-mode fibres (MMF) are the most common choice because of their high resolution but multicore fibres (MCF) offer a number of advantages such as widespread clinical use, ability to form approximate images without correction and an inherently sparse transmission matrix (TM) enabling simple and fast characterisation. We present a novel experimental investigation into properties of MCF important for imaging, specifically: a new method to upsample and downsample measured TMs with minimal information loss, the first experimental measurement of MCF spatial eigenmodes, a novel statistical treatment of behaviour under bending based on a wireless fading model, and an experimental observation of TM drift due to self-heating effects and discussion of how to compensate this. We next present practical techniques for imaging through MCFs, including alignment, how to parallelise TM characterisation measurements to improve speed and how to use non-interferometric phase and polarisation recovery for improved stability. Finally, we present two recent applications of MCF imaging: polarimetric imaging using a robust Bayesian inference approach, and entropic imaging for imaging early-stage tumours

    Improving performance of single-pass real-time holographic projection

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    © 2019 Elsevier B.V. This work describes a novel approach to time-multiplexed holographic projection on binary phase devices. Unlike other time-multiplexed algorithms where each frame is the inverse transform of independently modified target images, Single-Transform Time-Multiplexed (STTM) hologram generation produces multiple sub-frames from a single inverse transform. Uniformly spacing complex rotations on the diffraction field then allows the emulation of devices containing 2N modulation levels on binary devices by using N sub-frames. In comparison to One-Step Phase Retrieval (OSPR), STTM produces lower mean squared error for up to N=5 than the equivalent number of OSPR sub-frames with a generation time of [Formula presented] of the equivalent OSPR frame. A mathematical justification of the STTM approach is presented and a hybrid approach is introduced allowing STTM to be used in conjunction with OSPR in order to combine performance benefits.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/L016567/1 and EP/L015455/1
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