Apr 23, 2024
5:00pm - 7:00pm
Flex Hall C, Level 2, Summit
Yaxi Liu1,Bohan Zhang1,Qiushuang Lian1,Shuai Wang1,Yuanmu Yang1
Tsinghua University1
Yaxi Liu1,Bohan Zhang1,Qiushuang Lian1,Shuai Wang1,Yuanmu Yang1
Tsinghua University1
Recent decades have seen an increasing interest in developing super-resolution imaging methods that allow overcoming the diffraction limit. Near-field imaging methods achieve super-resolution by collecting evanescent waves with high spatial frequency components, often having subwavelength working distances or requiring the sample to be placed near a specially structured hyperlens. On the other hand, far-field super-resolution microscopy imaging with fluorescent substances often requires staining the sample. For non-invasive far-field super-resolution imaging systems based on a super-oscillatory lens, the field-of-view is limited by the unwanted sidelobes and sidebands. The throughput efficiency of the super-oscillatory lens dramatically decreases with the reduced size of the main focal spot. Here, we propose a far-field non-invasive super-resolution imaging method based on polarization-multiplexed metalens. By designing and optimizing the polarization-multiplexed, multi-channel point spread functions of the metalens, the system can obtain multi-channel optical information in a single shot. As a result, we obtain a digitally synthesized point spread function with a center hot spot with a small full width at half maximum as well as suppressed sidelobes and sidebands. Such a compact, single-shot super-resolution imaging system could enable new applications in diverse areas ranging from remote sensing to microscopy over a wide field-of-view.