The group velocity of 'space-time' wave packets - propagation-invariant pulsed beams endowed with tight spatio-temporal spectral correlations - can take on arbitrary values in free space. Here we investigate theoretically and experimentally the maximum achievable group delay that realistic finite-energy space-time wave packets can achieve with respect to a reference pulse traveling at the speed of light. We find that this delay is determined solely by the spectral uncertainty in the association between the spatial frequencies and wavelengths underlying the wave packet spatio-temporal spectrum - and not by the beam size, bandwidth, or pulse width.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis
November 2018
We analyze the effects of aperture finiteness on interferograms recorded to unveil the modal content of optical beams in arbitrary bases using generalized interferometry. We develop a scheme for modal reconstruction from interferometric measurements that accounts for the ensuing clipping effects. Clipping-cognizant reconstruction is shown to yield significant performance gains over traditional schemes that overlook such effects that do arise in practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCompressive sensing (CS) combines data acquisition with compression coding to reduce the number of measurements required to reconstruct a sparse signal. In optics, this usually takes the form of projecting the field onto sequences of random spatial patterns that are selected from an appropriate random ensemble. We show here that CS can be exploited in 'native' optics hardware without introducing added components.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInterferometry is one of the central organizing principles of optics. Key to interferometry is the concept of optical delay, which facilitates spectral analysis in terms of time-harmonics. In contrast, when analyzing a beam in a Hilbert space spanned by spatial modes - a critical task for spatial-mode multiplexing and quantum communication - basis-specific principles are invoked that are altogether distinct from that of 'delay'.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInterferometry is routinely used for spectral or modal analysis of optical signals. By posing interferometric modal analysis as a sparse recovery problem, we show that compressive sampling helps exploit the sparsity of typical optical signals in modal space and reduces the number of required measurements. Instead of collecting evenly spaced interferometric samples at the Nyquist rate followed by a Fourier transform as is common practice, we show that random sampling at sub-Nyquist rates followed by a sparse reconstruction algorithm suffices.
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