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Dive into the research topics where Neal Radwell is active.

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Featured researches published by Neal Radwell.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Simultaneous real-time visible and infrared video with single-pixel detectors.

M. Edgar; Graham M. Gibson; Richard Bowman; Baoqing Sun; Neal Radwell; Kevin J. Mitchell; Stephen S. Welsh; Miles J. Padgett

Conventional cameras rely upon a pixelated sensor to provide spatial resolution. An alternative approach replaces the sensor with a pixelated transmission mask encoded with a series of binary patterns. Combining knowledge of the series of patterns and the associated filtered intensities, measured by single-pixel detectors, allows an image to be deduced through data inversion. In this work we extend the concept of a ‘single-pixel camera’ to provide continuous real-time video at 10 Hz , simultaneously in the visible and short-wave infrared, using an efficient computer algorithm. We demonstrate our camera for imaging through smoke, through a tinted screen, whilst performing compressive sampling and recovering high-resolution detail by arbitrarily controlling the pixel-binning of the masks. We anticipate real-time single-pixel video cameras to have considerable importance where pixelated sensors are limited, allowing for low-cost, non-visible imaging systems in applications such as night-vision, gas sensing and medical diagnostics.


Nature Communications | 2016

Single-pixel three-dimensional imaging with time-based depth resolution.

Ming-Jie Sun; M. Edgar; Graham M. Gibson; Baoqing Sun; Neal Radwell; Robert A. Lamb; Miles J. Padgett

Time-of-flight three-dimensional imaging is an important tool for applications such as object recognition and remote sensing. Conventional time-of-flight three-dimensional imaging systems frequently use a raster scanned laser to measure the range of each pixel in the scene sequentially. Here we show a modified time-of-flight three-dimensional imaging system, which can use compressed sensing techniques to reduce acquisition times, whilst distributing the optical illumination over the full field of view. Our system is based on a single-pixel camera using short-pulsed structured illumination and a high-speed photodiode, and is capable of reconstructing 128 × 128-pixel resolution three-dimensional scenes to an accuracy of ∼3 mm at a range of ∼5 m. Furthermore, by using a compressive sampling strategy, we demonstrate continuous real-time three-dimensional video with a frame-rate up to 12 Hz. The simplicity of the system hardware could enable low-cost three-dimensional imaging devices for precision ranging at wavelengths beyond the visible spectrum.


IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics | 2009

Characteristics of Laser Cavity Solitons in a Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Laser With Feedback From a Volume Bragg Grating

Neal Radwell; T. Ackemann

In this paper, the properties of laser cavity solitons (CS) in a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser with feedback from a volume Bragg grating (VBG) are experimentally characterized. Independent optical manipulation of all eight possible bit states of three CS is demonstrated. Tilting the VBG provides evidence for different trapping states due to device disorder. The CS are found to ldquosplitrdquo from a single peak to two peaks with increasing current, then to more complex arrangements, which are strongly governed by the spatial inhomogeneities. Due to the lack of any dominant polarizing elements, the system shows complex polarization behavior; however, each stage of the CS evolution has an approximately constant polarization angle unique for each CS. The polarization state of the CS can be controlled by adding polarization-selective or changing optics into the cavity.


Nature Communications | 2016

Achromatic vector vortex beams from a glass cone

Neal Radwell; Ryan D. Hawley; Jörg B. Götte; Sonja Franke-Arnold

The reflection of light is governed by the laws first described by Augustin-Jean Fresnel: on internal reflection, light acquires a phase shift, which depends on its polarization direction with respect to the plane of incidence. For a conical reflector, the cylindrical symmetry is echoed in an angular variation of this phase shift, allowing us to create light modes with phase and polarization singularities. Here we observe the phase and polarization profiles of light that is back reflected from a solid glass cone and, in the case of circular input light, discover that not only does the beam contain orbital angular momentum but can trivially be converted to a radially polarized beam. Importantly, the Fresnel coefficients are reasonably stable across the visible spectrum, which we demonstrate by measuring white light polarization profiles. This discovery provides a highly cost-effective technique for the generation of broadband orbital angular momentum and radially polarized beams.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

Control of broad-area vertical-cavity surface emitting laser emission by optically induced photonic crystals

Bernd Terhalle; Neal Radwell; Patrick Rose; Cornelia Denz; T. Ackemann

We control the emission properties of a broad-area vertical-cavity surface emitting laser by coupling it to an external feedback cavity containing a photorefractive crystal with an optically induced photonic lattice. The periodic modulation of the refractive index serves as a tunable filter and enables the dynamic suppression of unwanted spatial instabilities and modes, as originally suggested by Gomila et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 253904 (2004)].We control the emission properties of a broad-area vertical-cavity surface emitting laser by coupling it to an external feedback cavity containing a photorefractive crystal with an optically induced photonic lattice. The periodic modulation of the refractive index serves as a tunable filter and enables the dynamic suppression of unwanted spatial instabilities and modes, as originally suggested by Gomila et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 253904 (2004)].


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Spatially dependent electromagnetically induced transparency.

Neal Radwell; Thomas W. Clark; Bruno Piccirillo; Stephen M. Barnett; Sonja Franke-Arnold

Recent years have seen vast progress in the generation and detection of structured light, with potential applications in high capacity optical data storage and continuous variable quantum technologies. Here we measure the transmission of structured light through cold rubidium atoms and observe regions of electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT), using the phase profile as control parameter for the atomic opacity. With q plates we generate a probe beam with azimuthally varying phase and polarization structure, and its right and left circular polarization components provide the probe and control of an EIT transition. We observe an azimuthal modulation of the absorption profile that is dictated by the phase and polarization structure of the probe laser. Conventional EIT systems do not exhibit phase sensitivity. We show, however, that a weak transverse magnetic field closes the EIT transitions, thereby generating phase-dependent dark states which in turn lead to phase-dependent transparency, in agreement with our measurements.


Optics Express | 2016

Comparison of beam generation techniques using a phase only spatial light modulator

Thomas W. Clark; Rachel F. Offer; Sonja Franke-Arnold; Aidan S. Arnold; Neal Radwell

Whether in art or for QR codes, images have proven to be both powerful and efficient carriers of information. Spatial light modulators allow an unprecedented level of control over the generation of optical fields by using digital holograms. There is no unique way of obtaining a desired light pattern however, leaving many competing methods for hologram generation. In this paper, we test six hologram generation techniques in the creation of a variety of modes as well as a photographic image: rating the methods according to obtained mode quality and power. All techniques compensate for a non-uniform mode profile of the input laser and incorporate amplitude scaling. We find that all methods perform well and stress the importance of appropriate spatial filtering. We expect these results to be of interest to those working in the contexts of microscopy, optical trapping or quantum image creation.


Journal of Optics | 2016

3D single-pixel video

Yiwei Zhang; M. Edgar; Baoqing Sun; Neal Radwell; Graham M. Gibson; Miles J. Padgett

Photometric stereo is an established three-dimensional (3D) imaging technique for estimating surface shape and reflectivity using multiple images of a scene taken from the same viewpoint but subject to different illumination directions. Importantly, this technique requires the scene to remain static during image acquisition otherwise pixel-matching errors can introduce significant errors in the reconstructed image. In this work, we demonstrate a modified photometric stereo system with perfect pixel-registration, capable of reconstructing 3D images of scenes exhibiting dynamic behavior in real-time. Performing high-speed structured illumination of a scene and sensing the reflected light with four spatially-separated, single-pixel detectors, our system reconstructs continuous real-time 3D video at ~8 frames per second for image resolutions of 64 × 64 pixels. Moreover, since this approach does not use a pixelated camera sensor, it can be readily extended to other wavelengths, such as the infrared, where camera technology is expensive.


Scientific Reports | 2017

A Russian Dolls ordering of the Hadamard basis for compressive single-pixel imaging

Ming-Jie Sun; Ling-Tong Meng; M. Edgar; Miles J. Padgett; Neal Radwell

Single-pixel imaging is an alternate imaging technique particularly well-suited to imaging modalities such as hyper-spectral imaging, depth mapping, 3D profiling. However, the single-pixel technique requires sequential measurements resulting in a trade-off between spatial resolution and acquisition time, limiting real-time video applications to relatively low resolutions. Compressed sensing techniques can be used to improve this trade-off. However, in this low resolution regime, conventional compressed sensing techniques have limited impact due to lack of sparsity in the datasets. Here we present an alternative compressed sensing method in which we optimize the measurement order of the Hadamard basis, such that at discretized increments we obtain complete sampling for different spatial resolutions. In addition, this method uses deterministic acquisition, rather than the randomized sampling used in conventional compressed sensing. This so-called ‘Russian Dolls’ ordering also benefits from minimal computational overhead for image reconstruction. We find that this compressive approach performs as well as other compressive sensing techniques with greatly simplified post processing, resulting in significantly faster image reconstruction. Therefore, the proposed method may be useful for single-pixel imaging in the low resolution, high-frame rate regime, or video-rate acquisition.


Optics Express | 2014

High speed switching between arbitrary spatial light profiles

Neal Radwell; D. Brickus; Thomas W. Clark; Sonja Franke-Arnold

Complex images, inscribed into the spatial profile of a laser beam or even a single photon, offer a highly efficient method of data encoding. Here we present a prototype system which can quickly modulate between arbitrary images. We display an array of holograms, each defined by its phase and intensity profile, on a spatial light modulator. The input beam is then steered by an acousto-optic modulator to one of these holograms, where it is converted into the desired light mode. We demonstrate switching between characters within three separate alphabets at a switching rate of up to10 kHz. This rate is limited by our detection system, and we anticipate that the system is capable of far higher rates. Furthermore our system is not limited in efficiency by channel number, making it ideal for quantum communication applications.

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T. Ackemann

University of Strathclyde

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Craig McIntyre

University of Strathclyde

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Gian-Luca Oppo

University of Strathclyde

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M. Edgar

University of Glasgow

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W.J. Firth

University of Strathclyde

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