Diffraction is a fundamental property of light propagation. Owing to this
phenomenon,light diffracts out in all directions when it passes through a
subwavelength slit.This imposes a fundamental limit on the transverse size of a
light beam at a given distance from the aperture. We show that a
subwavelength-sized beam propagating without diffractive broadening can be
produced in free space by the constructive interference of multiple beams of a
Fresnel source of the respective high-refraction-index waveguide. Moreover, it
is shown that such a source can be constructed not only for continuous waves,
but also for ultra-short (near single-cycle) pulses. The results theoretically
demonstrate the feasibility of completely diffraction-free subwavelength-beam
optics, for both continuous waves and ultra-short pulses. The approach extends
operation of the near-field subwavelength-beam optics, such as near-field
scanning optical microscopy and spectroscopy,to the "not-too-distant" field
regime (0.5 to about 10 wavelengths).Comment: 4 figure