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In this paper, we experimentally demonstrate a broadband Archimedes spiral delay line with high packing density on a silicon photonic platform. This high density is achieved by optimizing the gap between the adjacent waveguides (down to sub-micron scale) in the spiral configuration. However, care must be taken to avoid evanescent coupling, the presence of which will cause the spiral to behave as a novel type of distributed spiral resonator. To this end, an analytical model of the resonance phenomenon was developed for a simple spiral. Moreover, it is demonstrated that this distributed spiral resonator effect can be minimized by ensuring that adjacent waveguides in the spiral configuration have different propagation constants (β). Experimental validations were accomplished by fabricating and testing multiple spiral waveguides with varying lengths (i.e., 0.4, 0.8, and 1.4 mm) and separation gaps (i.e., 300 and 150 nm). Finally, a Linear Density Figure of Merit (LDFM) is introduced to evaluate the packing efficiency of various spiral designs in the literature. In this work, the optimum experimental design with mitigated resonance had a length of 1.4mm and occupied an area of 60 × 60µm, corresponding to an LDFM of 388km-1.Due to the wave nature of light, the resolution achieved in conventional imaging systems is limited to around half of the wavelength. The reason behind this limitation, called diffraction limit, is that part of the information of the object carried by the evanescent waves scattered from an abject. Although retrieving information from propagating waves is not difficult in the far-field region, it is very challenging in the case of evanescent waves, which decay exponentially as travel and lose their power in the far-field region. In this paper, we design a high-order continuous dielectric metasurface to convert evanescent waves into propagating modes and subsequently to reconstruct super-resolution images in the far field. The designed metasurface is characterized and its performance for sub-wavelength imaging is verified using full wave numerical simulations. Simulation results show that the designed continuous high-order metasurface can convert a large group of evanescent waves into propagating ones. The designed metasurface is then used to reconstruct the image of objects with sub-wavelength features, and an image with the resolution of λ/5.5 is achieved.Optical coherence tomography based on time-stretch enables high frame rate and high-resolution imaging for the inertia-free wavelength-swept mechanism. The fundamental obstacle is still the acquisition bandwidth's restriction on imaging depth. By introducing dual-comb with slightly different repetition rates, the induced Vernier effect is found to be capable of relieving the problem. In our work, a dual-comb based time-stretch optical coherence tomography is proposed and experimentally demonstrated, achieving a 1.5-m imaging depth and 200-kHz A-scan rate. Moreover, about a 33.4-µm resolution and 25-µm accuracy are achieved. In addition, by adjusting the frequency detuning of the dual-comb, the A-scan rate can be further boosted to video-rate imaging. With enlarged imaging depth, this scheme is promising for a wide range of applications, including light detection and ranging.Thermal problems of high-repetition-rate stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) pulse compression in liquid media are theoretically and experimentally analyzed in detail. A wedge lens with less coma-aberration was designed using the ray tracing method and the thermally induced beam-pattern distortion was compensated by inhibiting thermal convection. The heat transfer form and fluid state were quantitatively analyzed for different SBS liquid media. For a 74-W pump power, 3-kHz pulse-compressed phase-conjugation mirror with an energy efficiency of 36.2% is achieved. A potential optimization method of continuously adjusting SBS output characteristics using a mixed medium is proposed and theoretically demonstrated, to improve energy efficiency.Polarization light microscopy is a very popular approach for structural imaging in optics. So far these methods mainly probe the sample at a fixed angle of illumination. They are consequently only sensitive to the polarization properties along the microscope optical axis. This paper presents a novel method to resolve angularly the polarization properties of birefringent materials, by retrieving quantitatively the spatial variation of their index ellipsoids. Since this method is based on Fourier ptychography microscopy the latter properties are retrieved with a spatial super-resolution factor. An adequate formalism for the Fourier ptychography forward model is introduced to cope with angularly resolved polarization properties. The inverse problem is solved using an unsupervised deep neural network approach that is proven efficient thanks to its performing regularization properties together with its automatic differentiation. Simulated results are reported showing the feasibility of the methods.Stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) has attracted increasing attention in bio-imaging because of the ability toward background-free molecular-specific acquisitions without fluorescence labeling. Nevertheless, the corresponding sensitivity and specificity remain far behind those of fluorescence techniques. Here, we demonstrate SRS spectro-microscopy driven by a multiple-plate continuum (MPC), whose octave-spanning bandwidth (600-1300 nm) and high spectral energy density (∼1 nJ/cm-1) enable spectroscopic interrogation across the entire Raman active region (0-4000 cm-1), SRS imaging of a Drosophila brain, and electronic pre-resonance (EPR) detection of a fluorescent dye. We envision that utilizing MPC light source will substantially enhance the sensitivity and specificity of SRS by implementing EPR mode and spectral multiplexing via accessing three or more coherent wavelengths.A biocompatible, reliable and quick responsive fiber-optic sensor based on Mach-Zehnder interferometer (MZI) is demonstrated for nitrate analytes tracing. The sensor was constructed by collapsing the air holes of a short length photonic crystal fiber (PCF) with the single-mode fibers (SMFs) on both ways. The proposed sensor has been coated with a graphene-PVA (polyvinyl alcohol) membrane using the thermal coating technique to make the sensor attractive to the nitrate ions in the aqueous solution. The maximum response is found to be 0.15 pm/ppm on the nitrate measurement scale of 0 ppm to 100 ppm with an average reaction time of ∼10 s. Also, a short length of FBG (fiber Bragg grating) is implanted with SMF to improve the sensing accuracy of the presented sensor.Hot-carrier based photodetectors and enhanced by surface plasmons (SPs) hot-electron injection into semiconductors, are drawing significant attention. This photodetecting strategy yields to narrowband photoresponse while enabling photodetection at sub-bandgap energies of the semiconductor materials. In this work, we analyze the design of a reconfigurable photodetector based on a metal-semiconductor (MS) configuration with interdigitated dual-comb Au electrodes deposited on the semiconducting Sb2S3 phase-change material. The reconfigurability of the device relies on the changes of refractive index between the amorphous and crystalline phases of Sb2S3 that entail a modulation of the properties of the SPs generated at the dual-comb Au electrodes. An exhaustive numerical study has been realized on the Au grating parameters formed by the dual-comb electrodes, and on the SP order with the purpose of optimizing the absorption of the device, and thus, the responsivity of the photodetector. The optimized photodetector layout proposed here enables tunable narrowband photodetection from the O telecom band (λ = 1310 nm) to the C telecom band (λ = 1550 nm).To improve the color rendering ability in yellow color regions, the inclusion of yellow among the primary colors is commonly proposed. In this study, an algorithm for evaluating gamut enhancement in yellow regions is developed. The performance of different wavelength sets of RGBY four-primary system is studied theoretically in terms of various aspects, including the color gamut volume, gamut coverages, and gamut enhancement ratio in yellow regions. The optimal wavelength set and its optimal luminance ratio are then determined. This research provides strong guidance for the construction of practical four-primary-laser display systems.Photonic systems built on the Silicon-on-Insulator platform exhibit a strong birefringence, and must thus be operated with a single polarization for most applications. Hence, on-chip polarizers that can effectively suppress an undesired polarization state are key components for these systems. Polarizers that extinguish TE polarized light while letting TM polarized light pass with low losses are particularly challenging to design for the standard 220 nm Silicon-on-Insulator platform, because the modal confinement is stronger for TE polarization than for TM polarzation. Here, we propose and design a broadband, low loss and high extinction ratio TM-pass polarizer by engineering a Bragg grating that reflects the fundamental TE mode into the first order TE mode using a subwavelength metamaterial which at the same time allows the TM mode to pass. Our device achieves an extinction ratio in excess of 20 dB, insertion losses below 0.5 dB and back-reflections of the fundamental TE mode of the order of -20 dB in a bandwidth of 150 nm as demonstrated with full 3D-FDTD simulations.We propose, analyze and demonstrate experimentally an entirely new optical effect in which the centroid of a coherent optical beam can be designed to propagate along a curved trajectory in free space by tailoring the spatial distribution of linear polarization across the transverse beam profile. mTOR inhibitor Specifically, a non-zero spatial gradient of second order or higher in the linear state of polarization is shown to cause the beam centroid to "accelerate" in the direction transverse to the direction of propagation. The effect is confirmed experimentally using spatial light modulation to create the distribution in linear polarization and then measuring the transverse location of the beam profile at varying propagation distances. The observed displacement of the beam centroid is shown to closely match the theory out to 34m propagation distance.Time-resolved spectroscopy and, in particular, transient absorption methods have been widely employed to study the dynamics of materials, usually achieving time resolution down to femtoseconds with measurement windows up to a few nanoseconds. Various techniques have been developed to extend the measurement duration up to milliseconds and beyond to permit probing slower dynamics. However, most of these either demand complicated and expensive equipment or do not provide broadband spectral coverage. This paper proposes a transient absorption technique in which an ultra-short pulse laser and a broadband incoherent continuous-wave light source are employed as pump and probe, respectively. Detection of the transient probe transmission is performed in a time-resolved fashion with a fast photodiode after a monochromator and the data is recorded with an oscilloscope. The time resolution is determined by the electronic bandwidth of the detection and acquisition devices and is ∼1 ns, with a measurement duration window of up to milliseconds and a spectral resolution of less then 2 nm covering from 0.

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