Jacek Klimek
Maria Curie-Skłodowska University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jacek Klimek.
Optics Express | 2010
Tadeusz Martynkien; Gabriela Statkiewicz-Barabach; Jacek Olszewski; Jan Wojcik; Pawel Mergo; Thomas Geernaert; Camille Sonnenfeld; Alicja Anuszkiewicz; Marcin K. Szczurowski; Karol Tarnowski; Mariusz Makara; Krzysztof Skorupski; Jacek Klimek; Krzysztof Poturaj; Waclaw Urbanczyk; Tomasz Nasilowski; Francis Berghmans; Hugo Thienpont
We designed, manufactured and characterized two birefringent microstructured fibers that feature a 5-fold increase in polarimetric sensitivity to hydrostatic pressure compared to the earlier reported values for microstructured fibers. We demonstrate a good agreement between the finite element simulations and the experimental values for the polarimetric sensitivity to pressure and to temperature. The sensitivity to hydrostatic pressure has a negative sign and exceeds -43 rad/MPa x m at 1.55 microm for both fibers. In combination with the very low sensitivity to temperature, this makes our fibers the candidates of choice for the development of microstructured fiber based hydrostatic pressure measurement systems.
Applied Optics | 2005
Marcin Szpulak; Gabriela Statkiewicz; Jacek Olszewski; Tadeusz Martynkien; Waclaw Urbanczyk; Jan Wojcik; Mariusz Makara; Jacek Klimek; Tomasz Nasilowski; Francis Berghmans; Hugo Thienpont
We have manufactured and characterized a birefringent holey fiber of a new construction. The birefringence in this fiber is induced by the highly elliptical shape of the core, which consists of a triple defect in a hexagonal structure. Using a hybrid edge-nodal finite-element method, we calculated the spectral dependence of phase and group modal birefringence for spatial modes E11 and E21 in idealized and in real fiber, whose geometry we determined by using a scanning-electron microscope. Results of our calculations show that technological imperfections significantly affect the fibers birefringence. Normalized cutoff wavelengths for higher-order modes relative to the filling factor were also determined for the idealized structure. We observed a significant disagreement between theoretical and experimental values of cutoff wavelengths, which was attributed to high confinement losses near the cutoff condition. We also measured the spectral dependence of the phase and the group modal birefringence for spatial modes E11 and E21. The measured parameters showed good agreement with the results of modeling.
Photonics Letters of Poland | 2010
Jan Wojcik; Pawel Mergo; Mariusz Makara; Krzysztof Poturaj; Krzysztof Skorupski; Jacek Klimek
The paper presents the way that colour can serve solving the problem of calibration points indexing in a camera geometrical calibration process. We propose a technique in which indexes of calibration points in a black-and-white chessboard are represented as sets of colour regions in the neighbourhood of calibration points. We provide some general rules for designing a colour calibration chessboard and provide a method of calibration image analysis. We show that this approach leads to obtaining better results than in the case of widely used methods employing information about already indexed points to compute indexes. We also report constraints concerning the technique. Nowadays we are witnessing an increasing need for camera geometrical calibration systems. They are vital for such applications as 3D modelling, 3D reconstruction, assembly control systems, etc. Wherever possible, calibration objects placed in the scene are used in a camera geometrical calibration process. This approach significantly increases accuracy of calibration results and makes the calibration data extraction process easier and universal. There are many geometrical camera calibration techniques for a known calibration scene [1]. A great number of them use as an input calibration points which are localised and indexed in the scene. In this paper we propose the technique of calibration points indexing which uses a colour chessboard. The presented technique was developed by solving problems we encountered during experiments with our earlier methods of camera calibration scene analysis [2]-[3]. In particular, the proposed technique increases the number of indexed points points in case of local lack of calibration points detection. At the beginning of the paper we present a way of designing a chessboard pattern. Then we describe a calibration point indexing method, and finally we show experimental results. A black-and-white chessboard is widely used in order to obtain sub-pixel accuracy of calibration points localisation [1]. Calibration points are defined as corners of chessboard squares. Assuming the availability of rough localisation of these points, the points can be indexed. Noting that differences in distances between neighbouring points in calibration scene images differ slightly, one of the local searching methods can be employed (e.g. [2]). Methods of this type search for a calibration point to be indexed, using a window of a certain size. The position of the window is determined by a vector representing the distance between two previously indexed points in the same row or column. However, experiments show that this approach has its disadvantages, as described below. * E-mail: [email protected] Firstly, there is a danger of omitting some points during indexing in case of local lack of calibration points detection in a neighbourhood (e.g. caused by the presence of non-homogeneous light in the calibration scene). A particularly unfavourable situation is when the local lack of detection effects in the appearance of separated regions of detected calibration points. It is worth saying that such situations are likely to happen for calibration points situated near image borders. Such points are very important for the analysis of optical nonlinearities, and a lack of them can significantly influence the accuracy of distortion modelling. Secondly, such methods may give wrong results in the case of optical distortion with strong nonlinearities when getting information about the neighbouring index is not an easy task. Beside this, the methods are very sensitive to a single false localisation of a calibration point. Such a single false localisation can even result in false indexing of a big set of calibration points. To avoid the above-mentioned problems, we propose using a black-and-white chessboard which contains the coded index of a calibration point in the form of colour squares situated in the nearest neighbourhood of each point. The index of a certain calibration point is determined by colours of four nearest neighbouring squares (Fig.1). An order of squares in such foursome is important. Because the size of a colour square is determined only by the possibility of correct colour detection, the size of a colour square can be smaller than the size of a black or white square. The larger size of a black or white square is determined by the requirements of the exact localisation step which follows the indexing of calibration points [3]. In this step, edge information is extracted from a blackand-white chessboard. This edge information needs larger Artur Nowakowski, Wladyslaw Skarbek Institute of Radioelectronics, Warsaw University of Technology, Nowowiejska 15/19, 00-665 Warszawa, [email protected] Received February 10, 2009; accepted March 27, 2009; published March 31, 2009 http://www.photonics.pl/PLP
Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering | 2008
Jan Wojcik; Pawel Mergo; Mariusz Makara; Krzysztof Poturaj; Lidia Czyzewska; Jacek Klimek; Aleksander Walewski
Paper presents technology and some characteristic of manufactured suspended core microstructured optical fibers with cores undoped and doped with germanium dioxide. Manufactured fiber is very useful for evanescent wave sensors. Additionally on internal layers of holes thin (thickness about 28nm) silver layers were deposited. Those optical fibers probably will be very useful for surface plasmon resonance sensors. We introduced 6nm thick silver layers into holes of ordinary photonic crystal fibers 1m long.
Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering | 2006
Jan Wojcik; Mariusz Makara; Pawel Mergo; Barbara Janoszczyk; Jacek Klimek
Optical fiber strain or bend sensors have been demonstrated for complex monitoring various structures especially in aerospace, marine civil engineering and especially in optical security systems. Optical fiber sensors based on Fabry-Perot interferometers and fiber Bragg gratings are useful for point or slow-multiplied sensor systems. Distributed optical fiber system based on Sagnac interferometers used of low or high-birefringence optical fibers as strain/bend sensing elements. Special optical fibers as four core single mode fibers in Mach-Zehnder interferometer system have been used. In all described cases the high influence of temperature on sensor characteristics is very important disadvantage at measurement systems. In this paper we describe fabrication and characterization of the new four core PCF index guided fiber designed for interferometric bend measurements.
Photonics Letters of Poland | 2013
Pawel Mergo; Małgorzata Gil; Krzysztof Skorupski; Jacek Klimek; Grzegorz M. Wojcik; Janusz Pędzisz; Jarosław Kopeć; Krzysztof Poruraj; Lidia Czyzewska; Aleksander Walewski; Andrzej Gorgol
The paper presents the way that colour can serve solving the problem of calibration points indexing in a camera geometrical calibration process. We propose a technique in which indexes of calibration points in a black-and-white chessboard are represented as sets of colour regions in the neighbourhood of calibration points. We provide some general rules for designing a colour calibration chessboard and provide a method of calibration image analysis. We show that this approach leads to obtaining better results than in the case of widely used methods employing information about already indexed points to compute indexes. We also report constraints concerning the technique. Nowadays we are witnessing an increasing need for camera geometrical calibration systems. They are vital for such applications as 3D modelling, 3D reconstruction, assembly control systems, etc. Wherever possible, calibration objects placed in the scene are used in a camera geometrical calibration process. This approach significantly increases accuracy of calibration results and makes the calibration data extraction process easier and universal. There are many geometrical camera calibration techniques for a known calibration scene [1]. A great number of them use as an input calibration points which are localised and indexed in the scene. In this paper we propose the technique of calibration points indexing which uses a colour chessboard. The presented technique was developed by solving problems we encountered during experiments with our earlier methods of camera calibration scene analysis [2]-[3]. In particular, the proposed technique increases the number of indexed points points in case of local lack of calibration points detection. At the beginning of the paper we present a way of designing a chessboard pattern. Then we describe a calibration point indexing method, and finally we show experimental results. A black-and-white chessboard is widely used in order to obtain sub-pixel accuracy of calibration points localisation [1]. Calibration points are defined as corners of chessboard squares. Assuming the availability of rough localisation of these points, the points can be indexed. Noting that differences in distances between neighbouring points in calibration scene images differ slightly, one of the local searching methods can be employed (e.g. [2]). Methods of this type search for a calibration point to be indexed, using a window of a certain size. The position of the window is determined by a vector representing the distance between two previously indexed points in the same row or column. However, experiments show that this approach has its disadvantages, as described below. * E-mail: [email protected] Firstly, there is a danger of omitting some points during indexing in case of local lack of calibration points detection in a neighbourhood (e.g. caused by the presence of non-homogeneous light in the calibration scene). A particularly unfavourable situation is when the local lack of detection effects in the appearance of separated regions of detected calibration points. It is worth saying that such situations are likely to happen for calibration points situated near image borders. Such points are very important for the analysis of optical nonlinearities, and a lack of them can significantly influence the accuracy of distortion modelling. Secondly, such methods may give wrong results in the case of optical distortion with strong nonlinearities when getting information about the neighbouring index is not an easy task. Beside this, the methods are very sensitive to a single false localisation of a calibration point. Such a single false localisation can even result in false indexing of a big set of calibration points. To avoid the above-mentioned problems, we propose using a black-and-white chessboard which contains the coded index of a calibration point in the form of colour squares situated in the nearest neighbourhood of each point. The index of a certain calibration point is determined by colours of four nearest neighbouring squares (Fig.1). An order of squares in such foursome is important. Because the size of a colour square is determined only by the possibility of correct colour detection, the size of a colour square can be smaller than the size of a black or white square. The larger size of a black or white square is determined by the requirements of the exact localisation step which follows the indexing of calibration points [3]. In this step, edge information is extracted from a blackand-white chessboard. This edge information needs larger Artur Nowakowski, Wladyslaw Skarbek Institute of Radioelectronics, Warsaw University of Technology, Nowowiejska 15/19, 00-665 Warszawa, [email protected] Received February 10, 2009; accepted March 27, 2009; published March 31, 2009 http://www.photonics.pl/PLP
Optical Fibers and Their Applications 2008 | 2008
Pawel Mergo; Mariusz Makara; Jan Wojcik; Krzysztof Poturaj; Jacek Klimek; Krzysztof Skorupski; Tomasz Nasilowski
Supercontinuum radiation in photonic crystal fibers (PCFs) has recently found exciting applications in metrology, fundamental research, and medical sciences. Intensive efforts have been put into optimizing supercontinuum radiation parameters such as spectral width, flatness, and brightness. This work presents results of supercontinuum generation in suspended core microstructured optical fibers. These results are compared with supercontinuum generation in photonic crystal fibers with hexagonal lattice.
Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering | 2007
Jan Wojcik; Barbara Janoszczyk; Krzysztof Poturaj; Mariusz Makara; Aleksander Walewski; Pawel Mergo; Jacek Klimek; Krzysztof Skorupski; Lidia Czyzewska
Paper presents the state of advance of the silica glass microstructured optical fibers technology n Poland especially in Department of Optical Fibers Technology Maria Curie Sklodowska University. Only in this Department there are the technological apparatus for advanced investigations on the technology of the silica glass optical fibers. In paper was describe the technology of optical fiber photonic structure manufacturing, high silica glass synthesis from vapor phase with MCVD and OVD methods. Next was describe some kinds of microstructured optical fibers witch technologies elaborated in UMCS in support of own and received from cooperated research teams optical fibers structures, modeling and measurements results.
15th Conference on Optical Fibers and Their Applications | 2014
Sławomir Cięszczyk; Jacek Klimek; Krzysztof Skorupski; Piotr Kisała
This paper presents properties of all-optical bistable fibre switch using two fibre Bragg gratings and rare earth elements doped optical fiber. It is not possible to obtain bistable properties at low switching power level in case of a single fibre grating. In this article the method of optical switching that uses all-optical switch has been proposed. It has been achieved by varying the refractive index of nonlinear optical material as a result of light signal amplitude changes. Presented optical bistable device can be used both in contemporary optically switched networks as well as in optoelectronic sensors, owing to their high achievable resolution.
Electron Technology Conference 2013 | 2013
Pawel Mergo; Jacek Klimek; Krzysztof Skorupski; Katarzyna Gąsior; Mateusz Grzondko; Tadeusz Martynkien; Grzegorz M. Wojcik; Aleksander Walewski; Janusz Pędzisz; Jarosław Kopeć; Waclaw Urbanczyk
This paper presents the sensor characteristics of highly birefringent polymer side-hole optical fiber. The fiber core with greater refractive index was made of copolymer PMMA-PS, while the cladding of pure PMMA. The fabricated fiber showed relatively low losses of the order of 6 dB/m in the visible range. We measured several sensing characteristics in the fabricated fiber, including birefringence and polarimetric sensitivity to pressure and temperature. The fiber showed high polarimetric sensitivity to pressure, which is directly related to the presence of two large holes transferring symmetrical load applied to the cladding into nonsymmetric stress distribution in the core region. This in turn changes modal birefringence of the investigated fiber and increases the sensitivity to pressure.