Paper
5 May 2009 Multimaterial photosensitive fiber constructs enable large-area optical sensing and imaging
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Abstract
The process of optical imaging and the use of a glass lens have been hitherto inseparable since it is the lens that is responsible for mapping incoming rays to form an image. While performing this critical role, the lens, by virtue of its geometry and materials composition, presents constraints on the size, weight, angular field of view, and environmental stability of an optical imaging system as a whole. Here, a new approach to optical imaging is presented. Tough polymeric light-sensing fibers are suspended on a frame to form large-scale, low-density, two- and three-dimensional photonic meshgrids. While a single grid can indeed locate a point of illumination, it is the stacking of a multiplicity of such grids, afforded by their essential transparency, which allows for the detection of the direction of illumination with a wide angular field of view. A surface-spanning-arrangement of such fibers is used to extract an arbitrary optical intensity distribution in a plane using a tomographic algorithm. Lensless imaging is achieved by a volumetric fiber assembly that extracts both the phase and intensity distributions of an incoming electromagnetic field, enabling one to readily determine the object from which the field originally emanated.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ayman F. Abouraddy and Yoel Fink "Multimaterial photosensitive fiber constructs enable large-area optical sensing and imaging", Proc. SPIE 7314, Photonics in the Transportation Industry: Auto to Aerospace II, 73140H (5 May 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.821209
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CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Optical imaging

Sensors

Optical arrays

Computed tomography

Electromagnetism

Geometrical optics

Glasses

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