12–17 Jun 2016
University of Ottawa
America/Toronto timezone
Welcome to the 2016 CAP Congress! / Bienvenue au congrès de l'ACP 2016!

A Method to Arbitrarily Transform the Polarization of Light Variably Across a Beam

13 Jun 2016, 14:00
15m
Colonel By D207 (University of Ottawa)

Colonel By D207

University of Ottawa

SITE Building, 800 King Edward Ave, Ottawa, ON
Oral (Student, In Competition) / Orale (Étudiant(e), inscrit à la compétition) Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics, Canada / Division de la physique atomique, moléculaire et photonique, Canada (DAMOPC-DPAMPC) M2-3 Ultrafast and Time-Resolved Processes (DAMOPC) / Procédés ultrarapides et résolus dans le temps (DPAMPC)

Speaker

Mr Matthew Runyon (Department of Physics and Max Planck Centre for Extreme and Quantum Photonics, University of Ottawa, Canada)

Description

Light fields with spatially varying polarization have a wide range of potential uses in the areas of telecommunication, imaging, lithography, and quantum information. A spatial light modulator (SLM) is a two dimensional array of liquid crystal cells that can control phase, polarization, and intensity of light point by point across a beam’s spatial profile. We have developed methods to implement general polarization transformations using SLMs. That is, we can apply arbitrary polarization rotations that vary controllably across a beam. In quantum information, our methods in principle could enable the parallel processing of millions of optical modes, one for each cell. As an experimental example of the power of these methods, we take a beam with a non-uniform polarization across its spatial profile and convert it to be uniform. Such a correction could be useful for astronomy or microscopy imaging systems that suffer from polarization aberrations. In order to demonstrate the procedure’s effectiveness we present point by point measurements of the polarization before and after the correction.

Primary author

Mr Matthew Runyon (Department of Physics and Max Planck Centre for Extreme and Quantum Photonics, University of Ottawa, Canada)

Co-authors

Ms Alicia Sit (Department of Physics and Max Planck Centre for Extreme and Quantum Photonics, University of Ottawa, Canada) Dr Ebrahim Karimi (Department of Physics and Max Planck Centre for Extreme and Quantum Photonics, University of Ottawa, Canada) Dr Jeff Lundeen (Department of Physics and Max Planck Centre for Extreme and Quantum Photonics, University of Ottawa, Canada) Dr Lambert Giner (Department of Physics and Max Planck Centre for Extreme and Quantum Photonics, University of Ottawa, Canada) Ms Marissa Granados-Baez (Department of Physics and Max Planck Centre for Extreme and Quantum Photonics, University of Ottawa, Canada)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.