Ran Schley
Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ran Schley.
Nature Communications | 2014
Ran Schley; Ido Kaminer; Elad Greenfield; Rivka Bekenstein; Yaakov Lumer; Mordechai Segev
Self-accelerating beams--shape-preserving bending beams--are attracting great interest, offering applications in many areas such as particle micromanipulation, microscopy, induction of plasma channels, surface plasmons, laser machining, nonlinear frequency conversion and electron beams. Most of these applications involve light-matter interactions, hence their propagation range is limited by absorption. We propose loss-proof accelerating beams that overcome linear and nonlinear losses. These beams, as analytic solutions of Maxwells equations with losses, propagate in absorbing media while maintaining their peak intensity. While the power such beams carry decays during propagation, the peak intensity and the structure of their main lobe region are maintained over large distances. We use these beams for manipulation of particles in fluids, steering the particles to steeper angles than ever demonstrated. Such beams offer many additional applications, such as loss-proof self-bending plasmons. In transparent media these beams show exponential intensity growth, which facilitates other novel applications in micromanipulation and ignition of nonlinear processes.
Optics Express | 2013
Elad Greenfield; Ran Schley; Ilan Hurwitz; Jonathan Nemirovsky; Konstantinos G. Makris; Mordechai Segev
We present, theoretically and experimentally, diffractionless optical beams displaying arbitrarily-shaped sub-diffraction-limited features known as superoscillations. We devise an analytic method to generate such beams and experimentally demonstrate optical superoscillations propagating without changing their intensity distribution for distances as large as 250 Rayleigh lengths. Finally, we find the general conditions on the fraction of power that can be carried by these superoscillations as function of their spatial extent and their Fourier decomposition. Fundamentally, these new type of beams can be utilized to carry sub-wavelength information for very large distances.
Optica | 2015
Yaakov Lumer; Yi Liang; Ran Schley; Ido Kaminer; Elad Greenfield; Daohong Song; Xinzheng Zhang; Jingjun Xu; Zhigang Chen; Mordechai Segev
Self-accelerating optical beams form as a direct outcome of interference, initiated by a predesigned initial condition. In a similar fashion, quantum mechanical particles exhibit force-free acceleration as a result of interference effects following proper preparation of the initial Schrodinger wave function. Indeed, interference is at the heart of such wave packets, and hence it is implied that self-accelerating wave packets must be coherent entities. Counter to that, we demonstrate theoretically and experimentally spatially incoherent self-accelerating beams, in both the paraxial and the nonparaxial domains. We show that in principle, the transverse correlation distance can be as short as a single wavelength, while a properly designed initial beam will give rise to shape-preserving acceleration for the same distance as a coherent accelerating beam propagating on the same trajectory. These findings expand the understanding of the relation between coherence and accelerating beams, and may have implications for the design of self-accelerating quantum wave packets with limited quantum coherence.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2014
Ran Schley; Ido Kaminer; Elad Greenfield; Rivka Bekenstein; Yaakov Lumer; Mordechai Segev
We introduce loss-proof shape-invariant nonparaxial accelerating beams that overcome both diffraction and absorption, and demonstrate their use in acceleration of microparticles inside liquids along curved trajectories that are significantly steeper than ever achieved.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2013
Ran Schley; Ido Kaminer; Elad Greenfield; Rivka Bekenstein; Guy Bartal; Mordechai Segev
We introduce a new class of 1 & 2-dimensional beams that overcome both diffraction & absorption, enabling accelerating plasmons that maintain their intensity profile. In free space these beams exhibit a counterintuitive exponential intensity growth.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2015
Rivka Bekenstein; Ran Schley; Maor Mutzafi; Carmel Rotschild; Mordechai Segev
We find specific wavepackets that overcome analogue gravitational phenomena due to the complex interplay between interference effects and various optical gravitational effects, and demonstrate them in experiments with nonlocal nonlinear interactions.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2014
Rivka Bekenstein; Ran Schley; Maor Mutzafi; Carmel Rotschild; Ido Dolev; Ady Arie; Mordechai Segev
We demonstrate optical analogues of gravitational effects such as gravitational lensing, tidal forces and gravitational redshift in the Newton-Schrödinger mainframe, by utilizing long-range interactions between solitons and accelerating beams in nonlocal nonlinear media.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2014
Yaakov Lumer; Ran Schley; Ido Kaminer; Elad Greenfield; Mordechai Segev
Accelerating beams completely rely on interference: coherent superposition of waves. In spite of that fundamental feature, we demonstrate, experimentally and theoretically, partially-spatially-incoherent nonparaxial accelerating beams.
Advanced Photonics (2014), paper NM4A.5 | 2014
Rivka Bekenstein; Ran Schley; Maor Mutzafi; Carmel Rotschild; Ido Dolev; Ady Arie; Mordechai Segev
By utilizing long-range interactions between solitons and accelerating beams in thermal nonlocal nonlinear media we demonstrate optical analogues of gravitational effects, such as tidal forces, gravitational lensing and gravitational redshift.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2013
Elad Greenfield; Ilan Hurwitz; Ran Schley; Mordechai Segev
We present, theoretically and experimentally, non-broadening optical beams having arbitrarily small superoscillatory features. Our design facilitates control over the symmetry, width, and rotational orientation of the superoscillating beams.