日本午夜理伦三级 人人澡超碰碰中文字菷 久久久亚洲欧洲日产国码AV 绿巨人APP 被同事灌醉的日本电影 妇乱子伦交小说 最近最新中文字幕视频 年轻的搜子34 粗大紫红猛烈的贯穿h 阿v天堂2017在线播放 新欧美三级经典在线观看 2019中文字幕视频 人妻夜夜添夜夜无码AN 农村熟妇乱子伦拍拍视频 国产亚洲精品视频在钱一首页 久久丁香婷深爱五月天网 成年片黄色日本大片网站视频 免费人成视频XVIDEOS入口 国产av无码日韩av无码网站 噜啊噜色噜在线视频 德国极品少妇videossexhd 国产一区二区三区水蜜桃 全黄激性性视频 人妻少妇久久久久久97人妻 欧美XXXX精品另类 欧美最爽乱婬视频免费挤奶 高H喷水荡肉自慰爽文NP 曰批视频免费40分钟 ktv和闺蜜被强奷很舒服 日本一级淫色人妻 日韩精品一区二区中文最新章节 久久中文字幕无码A片不卡 香港三级强奷在线观看 亚洲日本乱理播放器 色综合天天99综合网观看 电影高清完整版在线观看 janpanese日本护士中文版 欧美日韩国产第一区 人妻厨房出轨上司HD院线波多野 欧美老熟妇乱子伦XX复古 精品中文亚洲字幕 成年视频大全免费 久久www免费人成一看片 亚洲AV无码日韩AV无码网站 CHINASPEAKING老大太 亚洲欧美日韩精品久久 看片神器app污免费视频大全 强奷绝色年轻女教师 小草青青在线最新手机免费观看 免费人妻无码不卡中文字幕18禁

Hollow-Core Fiber Raises Prospects for Next-Generation Scientific Instruments

Hollow-core fiber raises prospects for next-generation scientific instruments 

    NANF polarization holding. Credit: University of Southampton 

The novel fibres' latest advances, published this week in Nature Photonics, have underlined the technology's potential for next generation optical interferometric systems and sensors.

Hollow-core optical fibres combine the free-space propagation performance of the most advanced interferometers with the length scales of modern optical fibres by guiding light around bends in an air or vacuum filled core.

Researchers are engaging with industry partners, collaborating with the National Physical Laboratory and exploiting a UK network in the Airguide Photonics programme as they further expand the impact of the discovery.

Professor Francesco Poletti, Head of the Hollow Core Fibre Group, says: "By eliminating the glass from the centre of the fibre, we have also eliminated the physical mechanisms by which the  purity of an input beam can be degraded. As a result, our fibres provide qualities that represent a paradigm shift toward a huge leap in performance.

"With an attenuation as low as 0.28 dB/km and the prospect of soon achieving levels potentially below the Rayleigh scattering limit of conventional fibres, such waveguiding structures could soon provide vacuum-like guidance purity and environmental insensitivity at bespoke wavelengths and over hundreds of kilometres for the  of photonics-enabled scientific instruments."

Propagating  while preserving all of their essential attributes is a fundamental concern for all applications that use light to sense the environment or to transmit data and power. High-performance interferometers, gyroscopes and frequency combs use the wavelength of light as a miniature ruler to measure distances, rotation speed and time with incredibly accurate precision. They all rely on the transmission of light beams with the highest possible spatial, spectral and polarisation purity.

To achieve the best possible performance, scientists currently need to propagate light through free-space in a vacuum, such as for example in the 4 km arms of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) in the USA. However, these advanced interferometers are extremely expensive and often impractical at even much shorter length scales. Glass optical fibres offer a more pragmatic and portable alternative in sensing technologies but degrade polarisation purity and suffer from detrimental nonlinear effects.

Hollow-core fibres overcome all of these challenges to enhance the potential of optical interferometric systems and sensors, for example within optical gyroscopes that form the core of inertial navigation systems or for the flexible delivery and coherent combination of intense polarised radiation for the next generation of MegaWatt lasers.

This latest Southampton research was sponsored by the European Union funded LightPipe Project, which builds upon a decades of work at the Zepler Institute's renowned Optoelectronics Research Centre.

The Centre and its Director Professor Sir David Payne have played a leading role in the development of optical fibre technology for applications requiring control of the polarisation states of light. Work in this area also led to the creation of spinout company Fibercore, which has established itself as a global market leader in the production of polarisation maintaining optical fibres.

Professor Sir David Payne, said, "There are numerous applications in optics that require strict polarisation control, such as when two beams interfere to sense tiny changes caused by gravitational waves, or rotation sensing in fibre gyroscopes. The ideal way to transport  is in an optical fibre, but that normally leads to an uncertain, wandering polarisation state and drift in the sensor. It is a great surprise to find that certain types of hollow-core fibre can preserve a stable polarisation over long distances and this observation will have a huge impact on next-generation optical sensors.

"Hollow-core fibres continue to amaze us in ways that appear as if the  was not there—just like a vacuum with no diffraction."

(From:https://phys.org/news/2020-05-hollow-core-fiber-prospects-next-generation-scientific.html) 

  Copyright © The Institute of Optics And Electronics, The chinese Academy of Sciences
Address: Box 350, Shuangliu, Chengdu, Sichuan, China
Email:dangban@ioe.ac.cn Post Code: 610 209 備案號:蜀ICP備05022581號
四虎精品亚洲无码