Established in 2020 Wednesday, April 17, 2024


Three-dimensional imaging with optical frequency combs
Dual-comb digital holography. The regular train of pulses of a frequency-comb generator illuminates an object (here two coins in reflection). The wave scattered by the object spatially and temporally interferes with that of a reference comb at a lensless detector matrix. Image: DOI: 10.1038/s41566-021-00892-x.



GARCHING BEI MÜNCHEN.- Holography is a powerful technique of photography of a light field without a lens for 3D imaging and display. Now, scientists at the Max-Planck Institute of Quantum Optics are moving holography forward by implementing it with optical frequency combs. Thousands of holograms over all colors of the rainbow can be recorded. Via digital processing, each hologram provides a three-dimensional image of the scene in which the focusing distance can be chosen at will. Combining all these holograms renders the geometrical shape of the three-dimensional object with high precision and no ambiguity. At the same time, other diagnostics can be performed by the frequency combs: Here, the scientists show molecule-selective imaging of a cloud of ammonia vapor.

Frequency combs go 3D
Reporting in Nature Photonics, an international team of scientists in the group of Nathalie Picqué at the Max-Planck Institute of Quantum Optics (MPQ) in Garching, Germany, demonstrates a new imaging technique with optical frequency combs.

An optical frequency comb generator emits a regular train of short laser pulses. The spectrum consists of a large number of precisely equally spaced sharp spectral comb lines. Such frequency combs have made it possible to count the wiggles of a light wave with high precision. Theodor Hänsch, head of the Laser Spectroscopy Division at the MPQ, has shared the 2005 Nobel Prize in physics for this invention. Later on, in the technique of "dual-comb spectroscopy" developed at MPQ in the group of Nathalie Picqué, all the spectral lines of a frequency comb were used to interrogate a sample simultaneously over a broad spectral range, and the comb lines of a second laser with slightly different spacing interfere on a fast photodetector for read-out.




The new imaging method of hyperspectral digital holography extends the same interference method to holographic imaging. "The setup appears deceptively simple. It only uses two comb generators of slightly different pulse repetition rates, a partly transmitting beam-splitting mirror, and a fast digital camera sensor without lens," explains post-doctoral researcher Edoardo Vicentini.

A 3D object is illuminated by one of the pulse trains, and the scattered light is directed by the beam-splitter onto the camera sensor. The second pulse train is directed onto the same sensor as a reference beam. The camera registers a spatial interference pattern that changes with time, since the two lasers emit their pulses with a varying time separation. A video recording of such an interference pattern is shown in a supplemental video available from Nature Photonics.

In traditional holography, a fine interference pattern is recorded on film, and illumination of this hologram with a laser beam recreates the original wavefronts from the object by optical diffraction. In digital holography, the original scene is reconstructed by a computer program mimicking this process. In one of the reported experiments, two coins at different distances are used as objects. During digital reconstruction the focusing distance can be changed so that either of the coins appears in focus while the other appears blurred, as illustrated in the video.

"I was thrilled when I got a Matlab program to work, that could produce our movie of reconstructed images rather quickly," says Theodor Hänsch. "However, with a faster camera of megapixel resolution, the amount of recorded data can become rather large so that data processing will become more challenging."

Nathalie Picqué, pioneer of dual-comb spectroscopy, says, "Dual-comb interferometers already produce breathtaking results in spectroscopy and in ranging. The unique combination of broad spectral bandwidth, long temporal coherence and multi-heterodyne read-out offers powerful new features to holography. Our technique is likely to conquer new frontiers in scan-free wavefront reconstruction and three-dimensional metrology. Further, it will be exciting to explore its potential for microscopy of biological samples."







Today's News

December 5, 2021

Beads of glass in meteorites help scientists piece together how solar system formed

Wrangling an octopus-like viral replication machine

Three-dimensional imaging with optical frequency combs

Chemical pollutants disrupt reproduction in anemonefish, study finds

Researcher outlines how whales' sensory systems have evolved through imaging technology

Study reveals that giant planets could reach 'maturity' much earlier than previously thought

Combined heat and power as a platform for clean energy systems

Cannabis impacts sperm counts, motility in two generations of mice

Mapping RNAs

Snake photo posted on Instagram leads to the discovery of a new species from the Himalayas

Tracing European conflicts using lead isotopes in paints used by Dutch masters

Some polycrystal grain boundaries feel the heat more than others

How does the climate crisis affect the Antarctic fur seal?

A package of policies can help smallholder farmers adapt to a changing climate

Research finds nasal problem plagued long-nosed crocodile relatives

Microfabricated thin-film electrodes show therapeutic promise

Boosting thermopower of oxides via artificially laminated metal/insulator heterostructure

Green information technologies: Superconductivity meets spintronics



 


Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez



Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the ResearchNews newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful