TY - JOUR
T1 - Bessel beams
T2 - Diffraction in a new light
AU - Mcgloin, David
AU - Dholakia, Kishan
N1 - Funding Information:
DM gratefully acknowledges support from the Royal Society. KD acknowledges support from the UK’s EPSRC. We thank P. Saari and W.M. Lee for allowing us to use their images. We also thank G.F. Milne for supplying figure 11 and the experimental data pertaining to it.
PY - 2005/1
Y1 - 2005/1
N2 - Diffraction is a cornerstone of optical physics and has implications for the design of all optical systems. The paper discusses the so-called 'non-diffracting' light field, commonly known as the Bessel beam. Approximations to such beams can be experimentally realized using a range of different means. The theoretical foundation of these beams is described and then various experiments that make use of Bessel beams are discussed: these cover a wide range of fields including non-linear optics, where the intense central core of the Bessel beam has attracted interest; short pulse non-diffracting fields; atom optics, where the narrow non-diffracting features of the Bessel beam are able to act as atomic guides and atomic confinement devices and optical manipulation, where the reconstruction properties of the beam enable new effects to be observed that cannot be seen with Gaussian beams. The intensity profile of the Bessel beam may offer routes to investigating statistical physics as well as new techniques for the optical sorting of particles.
AB - Diffraction is a cornerstone of optical physics and has implications for the design of all optical systems. The paper discusses the so-called 'non-diffracting' light field, commonly known as the Bessel beam. Approximations to such beams can be experimentally realized using a range of different means. The theoretical foundation of these beams is described and then various experiments that make use of Bessel beams are discussed: these cover a wide range of fields including non-linear optics, where the intense central core of the Bessel beam has attracted interest; short pulse non-diffracting fields; atom optics, where the narrow non-diffracting features of the Bessel beam are able to act as atomic guides and atomic confinement devices and optical manipulation, where the reconstruction properties of the beam enable new effects to be observed that cannot be seen with Gaussian beams. The intensity profile of the Bessel beam may offer routes to investigating statistical physics as well as new techniques for the optical sorting of particles.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=12344303066&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/0010751042000275259
DO - 10.1080/0010751042000275259
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:12344303066
VL - 46
SP - 15
EP - 28
JO - Contemporary Physics
JF - Contemporary Physics
SN - 0010-7514
IS - 1
ER -