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Dive into the research topics where Myun-Sik Kim is active.

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Featured researches published by Myun-Sik Kim.


Optics Express | 2011

Engineering photonic nanojets

Myun-Sik Kim; Toralf Scharf; Stefan Mühlig; Carsten Rockstuhl; Hans Peter Herzig

Photonic Nanojets are highly localized wave fields emerging directly behind dielectric microspheres; if suitably illuminated. In this contribution we reveal how different illumination conditions can be used to engineer the photonic Nanojets by measuring them in amplitude and phase with a high resolution interference microscope. We investigate how the wavelength, the amplitude distribution of the illumination, its polarization, or a break in symmetry of the axial-symmetric structure and the illumination affect the position, the localization and the shape of the photonic Nanojets. Various fascinating properties are systematically revealed and their implications for possible applications are discussed.


Optics Express | 2010

Small-size microlens characterization by multiwavelength high-resolution interference microscopy

Myun-Sik Kim; Toralf Scharf; Hans Peter Herzig

Microlenses are widely studied in two main areas: fabrication and characterization. Nowadays, characterization draws more attention because it is difficult to apply test techniques to microlenses that are used for conventional optical systems. Especially, small microlenses on a substrate are difficult to characterize because their back focus often stays in the substrate. Here we propose immersion high-resolution interference microscopy to characterize small-size microlenses at three visible wavelengths. Test results for 20-mum-diameter microlenses are presented and discussed. We cover not only standard characterizations like wavefront investigations but also experiments of actual focus properties and chromatic behaviors.


Optics Express | 2012

Talbot images of wavelength-scale amplitude gratings

Myun-Sik Kim; Toralf Scharf; Christoph Menzel; Carsten Rockstuhl; Hans Peter Herzig

By means of experiment and simulation, we achieve unprecedented insights into the formation of Talbot images to be observed in transmission for light diffracted at wavelength-scale amplitude gratings. Emphasis is put on disclosing the impact and the interplay of various diffraction orders to the formation of Talbot images. They can be manipulated by selective filtering in the Fourier plane. Experiments are performed with a high-resolution interference microscope that measures the amplitude and phase of fields in real-space. Simulations have been performed using rigorous diffraction theory. Specific phase features, such as singularities found in the Talbot images, are discussed. This detailed analysis helps to understand the response of fine gratings. It provides moreover new insights into the fundamental properties of gratings that often find use in applications such as, e.g., lithography, sensing, and imaging.


Optics Letters | 2011

Subwavelength-size solid immersion lens

Myun-Sik Kim; Toralf Scharf; Mohammad Tahdiul Haq; Wataru Nakagawa; Hans Peter Herzig

We report on the fabrication and characterization of nanoscale solid immersion lenses (nano-SILs) with sizes down to a subwavelength range. Submicrometer-scale cylinders fabricated by electron-beam lithography are thermally reflowed to form a spherical shape. Subsequent soft lithography leads to nano-SILs on transparent substrates for optical characterization. The optical characterization is performed using a high-resolution interference microscope with illumination at 642 nm wavelength. The focal spots produced by the nano-SILs show both spot-size reduction and enhanced optical intensity, which are consistent with the immersion effect.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Gouy phase anomaly in photonic nanojets

Myun-Sik Kim; Toralf Scharf; Stefan Mühlig; Carsten Rockstuhl; Hans Peter Herzig

We investigate in real space amplitude and phase distributions of light in photonic nanojets emerging from micrometer-sized dielectric spheres with a high-resolution interference microscope. Strong localization of light and a Gouy phase anomaly are witnessed. We show that the phase advance of photonic nanojets significantly deviates from a plane wave due to the sudden transition from a converging to a diverging wave front. Understanding such phase anomalies and verifying the presence of photonic nanojets promises to pave the way to prospective applications that may exploit the ability to localize light in spatial domains smaller than the usual resolution limit.


Optics Letters | 2012

Longitudinal-differential interferometry: direct imaging of axial superluminal phase propagation

Myun-Sik Kim; Toralf Scharf; C. Etrich; Carsten Rockstuhl; Hans Herzig Peter

We introduce and demonstrate a new interferometric method called longitudinal-differential (LD) interferometry, which measures the spatially resolved phase difference of the scattered field by an object relative to the illumination. This method is combined with a high-resolution interference microscope that allows recording three-dimensional field distributions in amplitude and phase. The method is applied to study the axial phase behavior of Arago spots, an effect observable in low-Fresnel-number systems behind objects with a size comparable to the wavelength. We directly observe the initial phase delay in the Arago spot and prove that the local phase velocity exceeds the speed of light in air. Such LD phase studies are applicable not only to the Arago spot but also to other kinds of light interactions with wavelength-scale objects, e.g., photonic nanojets.


Optics Express | 2012

Phase anomalies in Bessel-Gauss beams

Myun-Sik Kim; Toralf Scharf; Alberto da Costa Assafrao; Carsten Rockstuhl; S. F. Pereira; H. Paul Urbach; Hans Peter Herzig

Bessel-Gauss beams are known as non-diffracting beams. They can be obtained by focusing an annularly shaped collimated laser beam. Here, we report for the first time on the direct measurement of the phase evolution of such beams by relying on longitudinal-differential interferometry. We found that the characteristics of Bessel-Gauss beams cause a continuously increasing phase anomaly in the spatial domain where such beams do not diverge, i.e. there is a larger phase advance of the beam when compared to a referential plane wave. Simulations are in excellent agreement with measurements. We also provide an analytical treatment of the problem that matches both experimental and numerical results and provides an intuitive explanation.


Optics Express | 2017

Polarization controlled directional propagation of Bloch surface wave

Tatiana Kovalevich; Philippe Boyer; Miguel Suarez; Roland Salut; Myun-Sik Kim; Hans Peter Herzig; Maria-Pilar Bernal; Thierry Grosjean

Bloch surface waves (BSWs) are recently developing alternative to surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs). Due to dramatically enhanced propagation distance and strong field confinement these surface states can be successfully used in on-chip all-optical integrated devices of increased complexity. In this work we propose a highly miniaturized grating based BSW coupler which is gathering launching and directional switching functionalities in a single element. This device allows to control with polarization the propagation direction of Bloch surface waves at subwavelength scale, thus impacting a large panel of domains such as optical circuitry, function design, quantum optics, etc.


Optics Express | 2013

Phase anomalies in Talbot light carpets of self-images

Myun-Sik Kim; Toralf Scharf; Christoph Menzel; Carsten Rockstuhl; Hans Peter Herzig

An interesting feature of light fields is a phase anomaly, which occurs on the optical axis when light is converging as in a focal spot. Since in Talbot images the light is periodically confined in both transverse and axial directions, it remains an open question whether at all and to which extent the phase in the Talbot images sustains an analogous phase anomaly. Here, we investigate experimentally and theoretically the anomalous phase behavior of Talbot images that emerge from a 1D amplitude grating with a period only slightly larger than the illumination wavelength. Talbot light carpets are observed close to the grating. We concisely show that the phase in each of the Talbot images possesses an anomalous axial shift. We show that this phase shift is analogous to a Gouy phase of a converging wave and occurs due to the periodic light confinement caused by the interference of various diffraction orders. Longitudinal-differential interferometry is used to directly demonstrate the axial phase shifts by comparing Talbot images phase maps to a plane wave. Supporting simulations based on rigorous diffraction theory are used to explore the effect numerically. Numerical and experimental results are in excellent agreement. We discover that the phase anomaly, i.e., the difference of the phase of the field behind the grating to the phase of a referential plane wave, is an increasing function with respect to the propagation distance. We also observe within one Talbot length an irregular wavefront spacing that causes a deviation from the linear slope of the phase anomaly. We complement our work by providing an analytical model that explains these features of the axial phase shift.


Optics Express | 2016

Refraction limit of miniaturized optical systems: a ball-lens example

Myun-Sik Kim; Toralf Scharf; Stefan Mühlig; Martin Fruhnert; Carsten Rockstuhl; Roland Bitterli; Wilfried Noell; Reinhard Voelkel; Hans Peter Herzig

We study experimentally and theoretically the electromagnetic field in amplitude and phase behind ball-lenses across a wide range of diameters, ranging from a millimeter scale down to a micrometer. Based on the observation, we study the transition between the refraction and diffraction regime. The former regime is dominated by observables for which it is sufficient to use a ray-optical picture for an explanation, e.g., a cusp catastrophe and caustics. A wave-optical picture, i.e. Mie theory, is required to explain the features, e.g., photonic nanojets, in the latter regime. The vanishing of the cusp catastrophe and the emergence of the photonic nanojet is here understood as the refraction limit. Three different criteria are used to identify the limit: focal length, spot size, and amount of cross-polarization generated in the scattering process. We identify at a wavelength of 642 nm and while considering ordinary glass as the ball-lens material, a diameter of approximately 10 µm as the refraction limit. With our study, we shed new light on the means necessary to describe micro-optical system. This is useful when designing optical devices for imaging or illumination.

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Hans Peter Herzig

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Toralf Scharf

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Carsten Rockstuhl

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Richa Dubey

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Maria-Pilar Bernal

University of Franche-Comté

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Thierry Grosjean

University of Franche-Comté

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Tatiana Kovalevich

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Elsie Barakat

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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