We present a novel class, to the best of our knowledge, of the zeroth-order Bessel correlation beams (BCBs) with breakthrough capabilities in sidelobe suppression and beam customization. Distinguished from their fully coherent counterparts, our coherence-engineered BCBs achieve unprecedented performance, including near-total sidelobe elimination, controllable discontinuous intensity profiles, and customized segmentation along arbitrary trajectories, such as helical and Archimedean spiral paths. These features make BCBs highly suitable for application in laser direct writing, microscopic imaging, and particle manipulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe inherent nonseparability of vector beams presents a unique opportunity to explore novel optical functionalities, expanding new degrees of freedom for optical information processing. In this Letter, we introduce a novel, to the best of our knowledge, method for tailoring the local nonseparability along the propagation axis of vector beams. Employing higher-order Bessel vector beams, the longitudinal control over the local nonseparability is achieved through targeted amplitude modulation of constituent orthogonal polarization components within the main ring region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFocal field modulation has attracted a lot of interest due to its potential in many applications such as optical tweezers or laser processing, and it has recently been facilitated by spatial light modulators (SLMs) owing to their dynamic modulation abilities. However, capabilities for manipulating focal fields are limited by the space-bandwidth product of SLMs. This difficulty can be alleviated by taking advantage of the high-speed modulation ability of digital micromirror devices (DMDs), i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Opt
October 2021
We theoretically propose and experimentally generate the nondiffracting Bessel-Poincaré beams whose Stokes vortices radially accelerate during propagation. To this end, we design the Bessel beams whose intensity is specified to be uniformly distributed along the longitudinal direction. By superposing two such Bessel beams having different helical phases and mutually orthogonal polarizations, the synthesized vector beam is endowed with the polarization singularity that can rotate about the optical axis, while the total intensities maintain their profiles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on a novel curvilinear optical vortex beam named twin curvilinear vortex beams (TCVBs) with intensity and phase distribution along a pair of two- or three-dimensional curves, both of which share the same shape and the same topological charge. The TCVBs also possess the character of perfect optical vortex, namely having a size independent of topological charge. We theoretically demonstrate that a TCVB rather than a single-curve vortex beam can be created by the Fourier transform of a cylindrically polarized beam.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOwing to their robustness against diffraction, Bessel beams (BBs) offer special advantages in various applications. To enhance their applicability, we present a method to generate self-accelerating zeroth-order BBs along predefined trajectories with tunable direction intensity profiles. The character of tunable direction intensity profiles in non-diffracting self-accelerating BBs potentially can attract interest in the regimes of particle manipulation, microfabrication, and free-space optical interconnects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF