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Caustics occur in diverse physical systems, spanning the nano-scale in electron microscopy to astronomical-scale in gravitational lensing. As envelopes of rays, optical caustics result in sharp edges or extended networks. Caustics in structured light, characterized by complex-amplitude distributions, have innovated numerous applications including particle manipulation, high-resolution imaging techniques, and optical communication. However, these applications have encountered limitations due to a major challenge in engineering caustic fields with customizable propagation trajectories and in-plane intensity profiles. Here, we introduce the "compensation phase" via 3D-printed metasurfaces to shape caustic fields with curved trajectories in free space. The in-plane caustic patterns can be preserved or morphed from one structure to another during propagation. Large-scale fabrication of these metasurfaces is enabled by the fast-prototyping and cost-effective two-photon polymerization lithography. Our optical elements with the ultra-thin profile and sub-millimeter extension offer a compact solution to generating caustic structured light for beam shaping, high-resolution microscopy, and light-matter-interaction studies.
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Zhou et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6bbd2b6db64358763ca0a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-48026-5
Xiaoyan Zhou
Singapore University of Technology and Design
Hongtao Wang
Singapore University of Technology and Design
Shuxi Liu
Guangxi Medical University
Nature Communications
National University of Singapore
Zhejiang University
Singapore University of Technology and Design
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