| Literature DB >> 30167270 |
Zhe Yang1,2, Omar S Magaña-Loaiza2, Mohammad Mirhosseini2, Yiyu Zhou2, Boshen Gao2, Lu Gao2,3, Seyed Mohammad Hashemi Rafsanjani2, Gui-Lu Long1,4, Robert W Boyd2,5.
Abstract
Photons that are entangled or correlated in orbital angular momentum have been extensively used for remote sensing, object identification and imaging. It has recently been demonstrated that intensity fluctuations give rise to the formation of correlations in the orbital angular momentum components and angular positions of random light. Here we demonstrate that the spatial signatures and phase information of an object with rotational symmetries can be identified using classical orbital angular momentum correlations in random light. The Fourier components imprinted in the digital spiral spectrum of the object, as measured through intensity correlations, unveil its spatial and phase information. Sharing similarities with conventional compressive sensing protocols that exploit sparsity to reduce the number of measurements required to reconstruct a signal, our technique allows sensing of an object with fewer measurements than other schemes that use pixel-by-pixel imaging. One remarkable advantage of our technique is that it does not require the preparation of fragile quantum states of light and operates at both low- and high-light levels. In addition, our technique is robust against environmental noise, a fundamental feature of any realistic scheme for remote sensing.Entities:
Keywords: object identification; orbital angular momentum; random light; remote sensing; second-order correlation
Year: 2017 PMID: 30167270 PMCID: PMC6062229 DOI: 10.1038/lsa.2017.13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Light Sci Appl ISSN: 2047-7538 Impact factor: 17.782
Figure 1Experimental setup for digital spiral object identification with random light. (a) Experimental setup. A DMD is illuminated by a 532-nm laser beam. The first diffraction order of the structured beam is isolated by a 4f-optical system comprised of two lenses and a spatial filter in the focal plane (figure not to scale). A series of random patterns are displayed on the DMD at a frequency of 1.4 kHz to produce a random field of light. The generated beam is divided by a beam splitter to produce a test beam that interacts with the object and a reference beam. An SLM in each arm is used to measure the OAM components in the random beam of light. (b) Image of the spatial intensity distribution of the random beam of light. (c) The amplitude or phase object is encoded into the SLM in the test arm. SMF, single mode fiber.
Figure 2Digital spiral identification for amplitude objects with four- and sixfold rotational symmetries. (a) An object with fourfold rotational symmetry with α=π/6 and β=π/4. (b) A similar object with α=π/8 and β=π/3. (c, d) The corresponding second-order correlation matrices. (e, f) The rows denoted by the dotted boxes in c and d, respectively.
Figure 3Digital spiral identification for a phase object. (a) The phase object consisting on a non-integer vortex with an OAM number of M=−2/3. (b) The corresponding forked hologram that we encode onto the SLM located in the test beam. (c) Experimental results for the second-order OAM correlation matrix. (d) A plot of the row denoted by the dotted box in c.
Figure 4Digital spiral identification for phase objects with different non-integer winding numbers: (a) M=−1/2, (b) M=−5/2, (c) M=−2/3 and (d) M=−8/3.