Mchughhorowitz9000
Optofluidic manipulation of droplets is critical in droplet-based microfluidic systems for chemistry, biology, and medicine. Here, we reported a thermocapillary microvortices-based manipulation platform for controlling oil-in-water droplets through integrating a photothermal waveguide into a microfluidic chip. The sizes and shapes of the droplets can be controlled by adjusting optical power or positions of the water-oil interface. Here, teardrop-shaped droplets, which can encapsulate and accumulate mesoscopic matters easily, were generated when the water-oil interface and the channel boundaries approached the photothermal waveguide center simultaneously. The results showed that the thermocapillary microvortices have good controllability of droplet positions, droplet volumes, and encapsulated-particle distribution and thus it will be a powerful droplet manipulation strategy for microreactors and microcapsules.We demonstrate a method of laser ablation with reduced feature size by using a pair of ultrashort pulses that are partially overlapped in space. By tuning the delay between the two pulses, features within the overlapping area are obtained on the surface of fused silica. The observed dependence of the feature position on delays longer than the free-carrier lifetime indicates an ionization pathway initiated by self-trapped excitons. This method could be used to enhance the resolution of laser-based lithography.A photonic approach to generate switchable down-, up-, and dual-chirped linear frequency-modulated (LFM) microwave signals utilizing a dual-polarization dual-parallel Mach-Zehnder modulator (DP-DPMZM) is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. By properly controlling the radio frequency signals and baseband LFM signals applied to the DP-DPMZM, switchable down-, up-, and dual-chirped LFM microwave signals with a tunable center frequency and chirp rate can be obtained. Experimental results show that switchable down-, up-, and dual-chirped LFM signals with a center frequency of 5 GHz and chirp rate of 1 GHz/4 µs are generated. SHIN1 In addition, the tunability of the center frequency and chirp rate of the generated microwave signals are also demonstrated.This Letter reports on a large mode area pixelated Bragg fiber in which some high refractive index rods were replaced by boron-doped rods that allows polarization maintaining behavior while keeping single-mode behavior. The realized all-solid fiber has a core diameter of 35 µm. The fundamental mode is circular with a 25 µm mode field diameter around 1 µm wavelength, and the polarization extinction ratio reaches 30 dB. Finally, this fiber is single-mode and bendable up to a 20 cm radius with fundamental mode losses lower than 0.3 dB/m.Exploiting temporal information of light propagation captured at ultra-fast frame rates has enabled applications such as reconstruction of complex hidden geometry and vision through scattering media. However, these applications require high-dimensional and high-resolution transport data, which introduces significant performance and storage constraints. Additionally, due to different sources of noise in both captured and synthesized data, the signal becomes significantly degraded over time, compromising the quality of the results. In this work, we tackle these issues by proposing a method that extracts meaningful sets of features to accurately represent time-resolved light transport data. Our method reduces the size of time-resolved transport data up to a factor of 32, while significantly mitigating variance in both temporal and spatial dimensions.The anisotropic optical dielectric functions of slanted columnar layers fabricated using polymethacrylate based stereolithography are reported for the terahertz-frequency domain using generalized spectroscopic ellipsometry. The slanted columnar layers are composed of spatially coherent columnar structures with a diameter of 100 µm and a length of 700 µm that are tilted by 45° with respect to the surface normal of the substrates. A simple biaxial (orthorhombic) layer homogenization approach is used to analyze the terahertz ellipsometric data obtained at three different sample azimuthal orientations. The permittivity along the major polarizability directions varies by almost 25%. Our results demonstrate that stereolithography allows tailoring of the polarizability and anisotropy of the host material, and provides a flexible alternative metamaterials fabrication method for the terahertz spectral range.We present a broadband terahertz (THz) polarizer based on the stacks of aligned Ni nanowire (NW) arrays. We demonstrated that the polarizer has an extinction ratio of 58.8 dB and an average extinction ratio of 46.6 dB throughout a frequency range of 0.3-2.3 THz. Compared to carbon-nanotube and metallic wire-grid polarizers, our Ni-NW polarizers with rapid, reliable, low-cost fabrication processes are ideal candidates for emerging THz technologies.By focusing on a typical emitting wavelength of 1120 nm as an example, we present the first, to the best of our knowledge, demonstration of a high-efficiency, narrow-linewidth kilowatt-level all-fiber amplifier based on hybrid ytterbium-Raman (Yb-Raman) gains. Notably, two temporally stable, phase-modulated single-frequency lasers operating at 1064 nm and 1120 nm, respectively, were applied in the fiber amplifier, to simultaneously alleviate the spectral broadening of the 1120 nm signal laser and suppress the stimulated Brillouin scattering effect. An over 1 kW narrow-linewidth 1120 nm signal laser was obtained with slope efficiency of $\sim77\% $∼77% and beam quality of $\rm M_x^2\sim 1.25$Mx2∼1.25, $\rm M_y^2 \sim 1.17$My2∼1.17. The amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) noise in the fiber amplifier was effectively suppressed by incorporating an ASE-filtering system between the seed laser and the main amplifier. Furthermore, the experimental results demonstrate that the spectral linewidth broadening effect is tightly related to the injected power ratios between the two seed lasers. Overall, this setup could provide a reference on obtaining and optimizing high-power narrow-linewidth fiber lasers operating in the long wavelength extreme of the Yb gain spectrum.