ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Optical aberrations have been studied for centuries, placing fundamental limits on the achievable resolution in focusing and imaging. In the context of structured light, the spatial pattern is distorted in amplitude and phase, often arising from optical imperfections, element misalignment, or even from dynamic processes due to propagation through perturbing media such as living tissue, free-space, underwater and optical fibre. Here we show that the polarisation inhomogeneity that defines vectorial structured light is immune to all such perturbations, provided they are unitary. By way of example, we study the robustness of vector vortex beams to tilted lenses and atmospheric turbulence, both highly asymmetric aberrations, demonstrating that the inhomogeneous nature of the polarisation remains unaltered from the near-field to far-field, even as the structure itself changes. The unitary nature of the channel allows us to undo this change through a simple lossless operation, tailoring light that appears robust in all its spatial structure regardless of the medium. Our insight highlights the overlooked role of measurement in describing classical vectorial light fields, in doing so resolving prior contradictory reports on the robustness of vector beams in complex media. This paves the way to the versatile application of vectorial structured light, even through non-ideal optical systems, crucial in applications such as imaging deep into tissue and optical communication across noisy channels.
Research on spatially-structured light has seen an explosion in activity over the past decades, powered by technological advances for generating such light, and driven by questions of fundamental science as well as engineering applications. In this r
Advances in vectorial polarisation-resolved imaging are bringing new capabilities to applications ranging from fundamental physics through to clinical diagnosis. Imaging polarimetry requires determination of the Mueller matrix (MM) at every point, pr
Coherent light-matter interactions have recently extended their applications to the ultrafast control of magnetization in solids. An important but unrealized technique is the manipulation of magnetization vector motion to make it follow an arbitraril
Optical communication is an integral part of the modern economy, having all but replaced electronic communication systems. Future growth in bandwidth appears to be on the horizon using structured light, encoding information into the spatial modes of
A fundamental insight in the theory of diffusive random walks is that the mean length of trajectories traversing a finite open system is independent of the details of the diffusion process. Instead, the mean trajectory length depends only on the syst