Photonics Research, Volume. 7, Issue 11, 1323(2019)
Physical picture of the optical memory effect Editors' Pick
Fig. 1. Comparison of laser light incident upon an aperture (System 1) and a random phase mask (System 2) with no thickness. (a) Tilting the laser beam an angle
Fig. 2. Comparison of light propagating through two screens in sequence. The second screen is (a) an aperture, referred to as System 3, and (b) a random phase mask, referred to as System 4.
Fig. 3. Simulation and experimental results. (a) Comparison of the normalized angular PSDs obtained from the MC simulation and Eq. (
Fig. 4. Workflow for generating the real-domain phase-only masks using the G-S algorithm.
Fig. 5. Comparison between the conventional phase mask model and our new phase mask model for a scattering medium with
Fig. 6. Principle of scanning a time-reversed focus. (a) A point source is placed in front of a scattering medium, and a wavefront of the transmitted light through the medium is recorded by the digital optical phase conjugation (DOPC) system. (b) The point source is removed, and a phase-conjugated wavefront is generated by the DOPC system to create a time-reversed focus at the original position of the point source. By adding a phase ramp to the phase-conjugated wavefront, we can scan the focus along a desired direction.
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Honglin Liu, Zhentao Liu, Meijun Chen, Shensheng Han, Lihong V. Wang, "Physical picture of the optical memory effect," Photonics Res. 7, 1323 (2019)
Category: Medical Optics and Biotechnology
Received: Jun. 26, 2019
Accepted: Sep. 19, 2019
Published Online: Nov. 1, 2019
The Author Email: Honglin Liu (hlliu4@hotmail.com), Lihong V. Wang (LVW@caltech.edu)