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University of Graz OpNaQ News Structured Light and Networks of Photonic Highways
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Friday, 12 January 2024

Structured Light and Networks of Photonic Highways

Neuartige Messmethode für strukturiertes Licht basierend auf integrierten photonischen Schaltungen. Bild: Uni Graz/Bütow ©Uni Graz / Banzer

Neuartige Messmethode für strukturiertes Licht basierend auf integrierten photonischen Schaltungen. Bild: Uni Graz/Bütow

Novel method to measure structured light based on integrated photonic processors. Bild: Uni Graz/Bütow ©Uni Graz / Banzer

Novel method to measure structured light based on integrated photonic processors. Bild: Uni Graz/Bütow

In a recently published research article, Peter Banzer and his team report on the measurements of structured light using integrated photonic processors, a network of highways for light.

Structured light surrounds us everywhere and every day. Sculpted light fields also play an important role in research. For example, a laser beam can have an intensity distribution that is much more complicated than that of a simple laser pointer. The same applies to other properties of light that, unlike intensity, cannot be observed directly, such as phase. Although this information plays an important role in optical communication, imaging, microscopy, and many other areas, it cannot be directly observed by our eyes or conventional cameras.

The research team from Graz, all members of the OpNaQ group, recently succeeded, as part of a European project (Superpixels) and the new Christian Doppler Laboratory for Structured Matter Based Sensing, in taking specially designed integrated optical processors made of silicon into operation and using them for the first time to measure these properties of light.

In a recent publication, they now went on to measure structured light, that is, light with a spatially varying intensity, phase, or even polarization (the direction of oscillation of the light field). For this, the light was processed within a specific network of highways for light. These measurements are highly accurate, potentially very fast, and allow the detection and distinction of the spatial structure of light. All results and further details were published in the journal Communications Physics, which is part the Nature portfolio.

Johannes Bütow, Varun Sharma, Dorian Brandmüller, Jörg S. Eismann, and Peter Banzer, "Photonic integrated processor for structured light detection and distinction," Communications Physics 6, 369 (2023); https://doi.org/10.1038/s42005-023-01489-2

Contact: Peter Banzer oder Johannes Bütow; Optics of Nano and Quantum Materials (website)

created by Peter Banzer

Related news

NanoGraz Careers & Ideas Days 2025: Career paths after the doctorate

On October 13 and 14, the consortium NanoGraz of the Research Career Campus at the University of Graz organized a two-day event to inform the consortium's doctoral students about their career options after completing their doctorate. In addition to exciting lectures by early-career researchers as well as representatives from industry, the Austrian Science Fund (FWF), and the research management of the University of Graz, a brainstorming competition took place on the second day, in which the participants had the opportunity to develop their own joint mini-projects.

Seed-Funding Grant: Bringing Ideas to Life Together

With the new OpNaQ Seed-Funding Grant, the OpNaQ Group, part of the Institute of Physics, lifts collaboration within the research group to a whole new level, and supports sub-groups in turning their ideas into concrete projects.

Dissecting Complex Light Fields

Members of the OpNaQ group and the Christian Doppler Laboratory [1] at the University of Graz demonstrate how photonic integrated circuits can be used to decompose complex spatial light fields into their constituent parts.

Award-Winning Ideas. Innovation Awards for Christian Doppler Laboratory.

Congratulations to Christoph Stockinger, Gandolf Feigl, and Samuel Hörmann for winning the Photonics and DeepTech Challenge Best Idea Awards.

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