Detail publikace
Twisted Rainbow Light and Nature-Inspired Generation of Vector Vortex Beams
BOUCHAL, P. BOUCHAL, Z.
Anglický název
Twisted Rainbow Light and Nature-Inspired Generation of Vector Vortex Beams
Typ
článek v časopise ve Web of Science, Jimp
Jazyk
en
Originální abstrakt
Twisted vector light beams (optical vortices) arise from a spiral modulation of the geometric (Pancharatnam-Berry) phase converting the light spin to the orbital angular momentum. The preferred geometric-phase elements using liquid crystals and plasmonic metasurfaces realize this conversion by structuring their building blocks, i.e., precisely orienting individual crystal molecules or plasmonic nanoantennas. Here, an analogous mechanism is discovered in the spiral phase modulation of light reflected by dielectric spheres and first demonstrated in natural phenomena, namely in the rainbow formation. The spiral geometric phase is documented by holographic imaging of full circle primary and secondary rainbows created in the laboratory. The measurement uses a wide-angle holographic camera (field of view approximate to 120 degrees) taking time-resolved self-correlation holograms (300 ms). The holograms allow a quantitative restoration of the spiral geometric phase of light reflected from thousands of randomly falling water drops. The capability of individual drops to generate vector vortex beams under circularly polarized illumination is proven theoretically and demonstrated in experiments using glass microspheres. The spherical reflectors are discovered as simple generators of vector vortex beams and vortex arrays, inspiring novel geometric-phase elements.
Anglický abstrakt
Twisted vector light beams (optical vortices) arise from a spiral modulation of the geometric (Pancharatnam-Berry) phase converting the light spin to the orbital angular momentum. The preferred geometric-phase elements using liquid crystals and plasmonic metasurfaces realize this conversion by structuring their building blocks, i.e., precisely orienting individual crystal molecules or plasmonic nanoantennas. Here, an analogous mechanism is discovered in the spiral phase modulation of light reflected by dielectric spheres and first demonstrated in natural phenomena, namely in the rainbow formation. The spiral geometric phase is documented by holographic imaging of full circle primary and secondary rainbows created in the laboratory. The measurement uses a wide-angle holographic camera (field of view approximate to 120 degrees) taking time-resolved self-correlation holograms (300 ms). The holograms allow a quantitative restoration of the spiral geometric phase of light reflected from thousands of randomly falling water drops. The capability of individual drops to generate vector vortex beams under circularly polarized illumination is proven theoretically and demonstrated in experiments using glass microspheres. The spherical reflectors are discovered as simple generators of vector vortex beams and vortex arrays, inspiring novel geometric-phase elements.
Klíčová slova anglicky
geometric phase; optical vortices; phase imaging; rainbows
Vydáno
06.06.2022
Nakladatel
Wiley-VCH GmbH
Místo
WEINHEIM
ISSN
1863-8899
Ročník
16
Číslo
7
Strany od–do
1–10
Počet stran
10
BIBTEX
@article{BUT178350,
author="Petr {Bouchal} and Zdeněk {Bouchal},
title="Twisted Rainbow Light and Nature-Inspired Generation of Vector Vortex Beams",
year="2022",
volume="16",
number="7",
month="June",
pages="1--10",
publisher="Wiley-VCH GmbH",
address="WEINHEIM",
issn="1863-8899"
}