Cameras and telescopes as thin as a sheet of paper?

Nanowerk June 10, 2021
Metalenses promise to make imaging devices more compact. An international team of researchers (Canada, USA – University of Rochester) has addressed the space between the lenses which is crucial for image formation but takes up by far the most room in imaging systems, by introducing the idea of a spaceplate. They experimentally demonstrated that it is compatible with broadband light in the visible spectrum. They manipulated light based on the angle rather than the position of a light ray. Angle is a completely novel domain. They designed and experimentally demonstrated plates that compressed the space. Such an optic would shrink future imaging systems, opening the possibility for ultra-thin monolithic cameras. More broadly, a spaceplate can be applied to miniaturize important devices that implicitly manipulate the spatial profile of light, for example, solar concentrators, collimators for light sources, integrated optical components, and spectrometers. In future research they want to increase the compression factor…read more. Open Access TECHNICAL ARTICLE

Advance of a broadband visible image using a spaceplate. Credit: Nature Communications volume 12, Article number: 3512 (2021) 

 

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