Optical self-healing is a repairing phenomenon of a beam in the propagation, as it is perturbed by an opaque object. In this work, we demonstrate experimentally and theoretically that the moiré distributed dual-microlens array enables to generate optical fields with better healing ability to withstand defects than their counterparts of a single microlens array. By utilizing the double parameter scanning method, the self-healing degree of the optical field is significantly affected by both the interval distance and the relative angle of the dual-microlens arrays. The self-healing level is decreased significantly by lengthening the interval between the two microlens array with a small twist angle, while increasing the angle enhances the self-healing degree. Further study manifests the self-healing process with respect to the size and central location of the obstacle. The research results provide a simple and effective method to generate self-healing optical wave fields, which have potential applications including optical communication, assisted imaging technology, and even intense laser physics.
We introduce the optical vortex beam into simultaneous spatial and temporal focusing (SSTF) technique, and theoretically and experimentally demonstrate the local control of peak intensity distribution at the focus of a simultaneous spatiotemporally focused optical vortex (SSTF OV) beam. To avoid nonlinear self-focusing in the conventional focusing scheme, a spatiotemporally focused femtosecond laser vortex beam was employed to achieve doughnut-shaped ablation and high aspect ratio (∼28) microchannels on the back surface of 3 mm thick soda-lime glass and fused silica substrates.
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