Temporal imaging and related concepts provide new, unique opportunities for generation, measurement, cloaking and processing of time-domain waveforms across a wide range of frequency regimes, from electronic and radio frequency (RF) signals to ultrafast optical information.1–3 Temporal imaging systems developed to date are based on suitable combinations of dispersive processes and time lenses, and they generally rely on coherent optics. Thus, these systems require the use of short-pulse (broadband) light sources (e.g., mode-locked lasers1–3) and precise coherent phase control of the involved waveforms.1–3 These requirements represent a fundamental hurdle to the practical use of these methods. Temporally incoherent light sources are inherently broadband and they are significantly simpler and more affordable than their coherent counterparts. Mechanisms have been demonstrated for temporal dispersion of incoherent optical waveforms; however, no system based on time lenses has been previously realized using an incoherent lightwave approach.4
We have recently proposed and experimentally demonstrated an important scheme for temporal imaging, including time-to-frequency mapping and temporal magnification or compression of incoherent-light intensity waveforms.5 The scheme is based on a time-domain equivalent of a classical pinhole camera illuminated by incoherent light, and it employs only temporal intensity modulation (time-domain pinhole) combined with two dispersive lines. We have reported incoherent-light temporal imaging of RF waveforms with a resolution of about 50 ps over a temporal aperture exceeding 8 ns, using a 146 ps temporal pinhole.5 Our proposal opens up entirely new possibilities for realization of a wide variety of critical high-speed signal processing modules using simple and practical incoherent light-wave schemes.
Researchers
Bo Li and José Azaña, Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique—Energie, Matériaux et Télécommunications, Montréal, Québec, Canada
References
1. M.A. Foster et al. Nature 456, 81 (2008).
2. M. Fridman et al. Nature 481, 62 (2012).
3. K. Goda et al. Nat. Photon. 7, 102 (2013).
4. C. Dorrer. Opt. Express 17, 3341 (2009).
5. B. Li et al. Opt. Lett. 39, 4243 (2014).