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Dive into the research topics where Wilfried Glastre is active.

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Featured researches published by Wilfried Glastre.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2011

Experimental comparison of autodyne and heterodyne laser interferometry using an Nd:YVO 4 microchip laser

Olivier Jacquin; Eric Lacot; Wilfried Glastre; Olivier Hugon; Hugues Guillet de Chatellus

Using an Nd:YVO₄ microchip laser with a relaxation frequency in the megahertz range, we have experimentally compared a heterodyne interferometer based on a Michelson configuration with an autodyne interferometer based on the laser optical feedback imaging (LOFI) method regarding their signal-to-noise ratios. In the heterodyne configuration, the beating between the reference beam and the signal beam is realized outside the laser cavity, while in the autodyne configuration, the wave beating takes place inside the laser cavity, and the relaxation oscillations of the laser intensity then play an important part. For a given laser output power, object under investigation, and detection noise level, we have determined the amplification gain of the LOFI interferometer compared to the heterodyne interferometer. LOFI interferometry is demonstrated to show higher performance than heterodyne interferometry for a wide range of laser powers and detection levels of noise. The experimental results are in good agreement with the theoretical predictions.


Optics Express | 2013

Demonstration of a plenoptic microscope based on laser optical feedback imaging.

Wilfried Glastre; Olivier Hugon; Olivier Jacquin; Hugues Guillet de Chatellus; Eric Lacot

A new kind of plenoptic imaging system based on Laser Optical Feedback Imaging (LOFI) is presented and is compared to another previously existing device based on microlens array. Improved photometric performances, resolution and depth of field are obtained at the price of a slow point by point scanning. Main properties of plenoptic microscopes such as numerical refocusing on any curved surface or aberrations compensation are both theoretically and experimentally demonstrated with a LOFI-based device.


Optics Express | 2013

Generation of ultrahigh and tunable repetition rates in CW injection-seeded frequency-shifted feedback lasers

H. Guillet de Chatellus; Olivier Jacquin; Olivier Hugon; Wilfried Glastre; Eric Lacot; Jens Marklof

We show both theoretically and experimentally that frequency-shifted feedback (FSF) lasers seeded with a single frequency laser can generate Fourier transform-limited pulses with a repetition rate tunable and limited by the spectral bandwidth of the laser. We demonstrate experimentally in a FSF laser with a 150 GHz spectral bandwidth, the generation of 6 ps-duration pulses at repetition rates tunable over more than two orders of magnitude between 0.24 and 37 GHz, by steps of 80 MHz. A simple linear analytical model i.e. ignoring both dynamic and non-linear effects, is sufficient to account for the experimental results. This possibility opens new perspectives for various applications where lasers with ultra-high repetition rates are required, from THz generation to ultrafast data processing systems.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2012

Synthetic aperture laser optical feedback imaging using a translational scanning with galvanometric mirrors

Wilfried Glastre; Olivier Jacquin; Olivier Hugon; Hugues Guillet de Chatellus; Eric Lacot

In this paper we present an experimental setup based on laser optical feedback imaging (LOFI) and on synthetic aperture with translational scanning by galvanometric mirrors for the purpose of making deep and resolved images through scattering media. We provide real two-dimensional optical synthetic aperture image of a fixed scattering target with a moving aperture and an isotropic resolution. We demonstrate theoretically and experimentally that we can keep microscope resolution beyond the working distance. A photometric balance is made, and we show that the number of photons participating in the final image decreases with the square of the reconstruction distance. This degradation is partially compensated by the high sensitivity of LOFI.


Optics Letters | 2012

Deep and optically resolved imaging through scattering media by space-reversed propagation

Wilfried Glastre; Olivier Jacquin; Olivier Hugon; H. Guillet de Chatellus; Eric Lacot

We propose a novel technique of microscopy to overcome the effects of both scattering and limitation of the accessible depth due to the objective working distance. By combining laser optical feedback imaging with acoustic photon tagging and synthetic aperture refocusing we demonstrate an ultimate shot noise sensitivity at low power (required to preserve the tissues) and a high resolution beyond the microscope working distance. More precisely, with a laser power of 10 mW, we obtain images with a micrometric resolution over approximately eight transport mean free paths, corresponding to 1.3 times the microscope working distance. Various applications such as biomedical diagnosis and research and development of new drugs and therapies can benefit from our imaging setup.


Optics Letters | 2012

Acousto-optic laser optical feedback imaging

Olivier Jacquin; Wilfried Glastre; Eric Lacot; Olivier Hugon; H. Guillet de Chatellus; François Ramaz

We present a photon noise and diffraction-limited imaging method combining an imaging laser and ultrasonic waves. The laser optical feedback imaging (LOFI) technique is an ultrasensitive imaging method for imaging objects through or embedded within a scattering medium. However, LOFI performances are dramatically limited by parasitic optical feedback occurring in the experimental setup. In this Letter, we have tagged the ballistic photons by an acousto-optic effect in order to filter the parasitic feedback effect and to reach the theoretical and ultimate sensitivity of the LOFI technique. We present the principle and the experimental setup of the acousto-optic laser optical feedback imaging technique, and we demonstrate the suppression of the parasitic feedback.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2012

Sensitivity of synthetic aperture laser optical feedback imaging.

Wilfried Glastre; Eric Lacot; Olivier Jacquin; Olivier Hugon; Hugues Guillet de Chatellus

In this paper, we compare the sensitivity of two imaging configurations, both based on laser optical feedback imaging (LOFI). The first one is direct imaging, which uses conventional optical focalization on target, and the second one is made by a synthetic aperture (SA) laser, which uses numerical focalization. We show that SA configuration allows us to obtain good resolutions with high working distance and that the drawback of SA imagery is that it has a worse photometric balance in comparison to a conventional microscope. This drawback is partially compensated by the important sensitivity of LOFI. Another interest of SA relies on the capacity of getting three-dimensional information in a single x-y scan.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2013

Optimization of an autodyne laser interferometer for high-speed confocal imaging

Eric Lacot; Wilfried Glastre; Olivier Jacquin; Olivier Hugon; Hugues Guillet de Chatellus

In autodyne interferometry, the beating between the reference beam and the signal beam takes place inside the laser cavity and therefore the laser fulfills simultaneously the roles of the emitter and the detector of photons. In these conditions, the laser relaxation oscillations play a leading role, both in the laser quantum noise that determines the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and also in the laser dynamics that determine the response time of the interferometer. In the present study, we have theoretically analyzed the SNR and the response time of a laser optical feedback imaging (LOFI) setup based on an autodyne interferometer. More precisely, we have compared the image quality of two lasers having the same output power and the same relaxation frequency, but having two different values of the LOFI gain induced by two different values of the laser response time. From this study, we have finally determined the best laser dynamical parameters and the best experimental conditions for high-speed imaging at the shot-noise limit. Finally, we conclude that a laser diode with a very short response time (in the nanosecond range) seems to be an interesting candidate compared to solid-state microchip laser with a response time of several tens of microseconds. Analytical predictions are confirmed by numerical simulations.


Optics Letters | 2012

Heterodyne beatings between frequency-shifted feedback lasers

Hugues Guillet de Chatellus; Eric Lacot; Olivier Jacquin; Wilfried Glastre; Olivier Hugon

Frequency-shifted feedback (FSF) lasers are potential candidates for long distance telemetry due to the appearance of beatings in the noise spectrum at the output of a homodyne interferometer: the frequencies of these beatings vary linearly with the path delay. In this Letter we demonstrate that these beatings also occur in the heterodyne mixing of two identical, but distinct, FSF lasers. This phenomenon is explained by the passive cavity model and is exploited to characterize the time-spectrum properties of FSF lasers. Consequences on telemetry with FSF lasers are presented.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2012

Limitations of synthetic aperture laser optical feedback imaging

Wilfried Glastre; Olivier Jacquin; Olivier Hugon; Hugues Guillet de Chatellus; Eric Lacot

In this paper we study the origin and the effect of amplitude and phase noise on laser optical feedback imaging associated with a synthetic aperture (SA) imaging system. Amplitude noise corresponds to photon noise and acts as an additive noise; it can be reduced by increasing the global measurement time. Phase noise can be divided in three families: random, sinusoidal, and drift phase noise; we show that it acts as a multiplicative noise. We explain how we can reduce phase noise by making oversampling or multiple measurements depending on its type. This work can easily be extended to all SA systems (radar, laser, or terahertz), especially when raw holograms are acquired point by point.

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Eric Lacot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Olivier Hugon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Olivier Jacquin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Hugues Guillet de Chatellus

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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H. Guillet de Chatellus

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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François Ramaz

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pierre Guillemé

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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