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2020 IPS Conference
Study Materials
Corporate Members
Home
About/Contact
Newsletters
Events/Seminars
2020 IPS Conference
Study Materials
Corporate Members
Scattering of light in complex samples such as biological tissues renders most samples opaque to conventional imaging techniques, a problem of great practical importance. However, although random, scattering is a deterministic process, and it can be undone, controlled, and even exploited by carefully shaping the input wavefront, forming the basis for the emerging field of optical wavefront-shaping1,2, and opening the path to imaging through visually opaque samples3 and to the control of scattered ultrashort pulses4. Unfortunately, many demonstration of all-optical wavefront-shaping1-4 require a localized feedback signal from the target, and thus an invasive implantation of an optical probe.
I will present some of our recent efforts in addressing this challenge5-7. These include the use of the photoacoustic effect to focus and control light non-invasively inside a scattering medium5, and the use of optical nonlinearities to focus light noninvasively through scattering samples6. I will also show how one can surprisingly “see through” opaque samples and ‘around corners’ using nothing but a smartphone camera7, by exploiting the inherent correlations of scattered light, challenging the common view on diffuse scattered light as an information-less halo.
References
[1] A.P. Mosk et al., Nature Photonics 6, 283 (2012).
[2] D.S. Wiersma, Nature Photonics 7, 188 (2013).
[3] O. Katz et al., Nature Photonics 6, 549 (2012).
[4] O. Katz et al., Nature Photonics 5, 372 (2011).
[5] T. Chaigne, O. Katz et al. Nature Photonics 8, 58 (2014).
[6] O.Katz et al., Optica, 1, 3, 170-174 (2014).
[7] O. Katz, et al., Nature Photonics, 8, 784–790 (2014).