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Observation of mutual extinction and transparency in light scattering
- Source :
- Physical review A : atomic, molecular, and optical physics and quantum information, 104(4):043515. American Physical Society, Physical Review A, 104(4), 1. American Physical Society
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Interference of scattered waves is fundamental for modern light-scattering techniques, such as optical wavefront shaping. Recently, a new type of wavefront shaping was introduced where the extinction is manipulated instead of the scattered intensity. The underlying idea is that upon changing the phases or the amplitudes of incident beams, the total extinction will change due to interference described by the cross terms between different incident beams. Here, we experimentally demonstrate the mutual extinction and transparency effects in scattering media, in particular, a human hair and a silicon bar. To this end, we send two light beams with a variable mutual angle on the sample. Depending on the relative phase of the incident beams, we observe either nearly zero extinction, mutual transparency, or almost twice the single-beam extinction, mutual extinction, in agreement with theory. We use an analytical approximation for the scattering amplitude, starting from a completely opaque object, and we discuss the limitations of our approximation. We discuss the applications of the mutual extinction and transparency effects in various fields such as non-line-of-sight communications, microscopy, and biomedical imaging.
- Subjects :
- Wavefront
Physics
Opacity
business.industry
Scattering
FOS: Physical sciences
Interference (wave propagation)
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Light scattering
Scattering amplitude
Optics
Extinction (optical mineralogy)
Atomic and Molecular Physics
Light beam
and Optics
business
Optics (physics.optics)
Physics - Optics
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 24699926
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Physical review A : atomic, molecular, and optical physics and quantum information, 104(4):043515. American Physical Society, Physical Review A, 104(4), 1. American Physical Society
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....cbe8812a8914df135a28c8467a219baf