Litcius/Paper detail

Abruptly autofocusing of generalized circular Airy derivative beams

Xiang Zang, Wensong Dan, Yimin Zhou, Han Lv, Fei Wang, Yangjian Cai, Guoquan Zhou

2022Optics Express72 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In this paper, we introduce a novel kind of abrupt autofocusing beams namely the generalized circular Airy derivative beams (CADBs) as an extension of circular Airy beam (CAB). The propagation dynamics of the CADBs is examined theoretically. Our results show that the CADBs exhibit stronger autofocusing ability than the CAB under the same condition. The physical mechanism of the abruptly autofocusing of the CADBs is interpreted by mimicking the Fresnel zone plate lens. Here, the abruptly autofocusing ability is described by a ratio K = I fm / I 0 m where I fm and I 0 m correspond to the maximum intensities in the focal and the source planes, respectively. As an example, the K -value of the circular Airyprime beam (CAPB, the first-order Airy derivative beam) is about 7 times of that of the CAB. In addition, the CAPB have narrower FWHM (full width at half maxima) in the focus position than the CAB, and the focal spot size of the CAPB is smaller than that of the CAB. Furthermore, we establish an optical system involving a phase-only spatial light modulator to generate the CAPB and measure its autofocusing characteristics experimentally. The measured K -value is about 9.4 percentage error between theory and experiment owing to the imperfection generation of the CAPB. The proposed generalized CADBs will find applications in biomedical treatment, optical manipulation and so on.

Topics & Concepts

OpticsPhysicsPosition (finance)Airy beamFocus (optics)Beam (structure)Full width at half maximumLight beamDerivative (finance)Airy functionPhysical opticsFocal lengthMeasure (data warehouse)Spatial light modulatorFresnel numberOptical tweezersSpatial frequencyFresnel zoneCardinal pointBeam diameterGeometrical opticsSecond derivativeFresnel diffractionTime derivativePtychographyDiffractionOrbital Angular Momentum in OpticsDigital Holography and MicroscopyAdvanced optical system design