- Abstract
In conical refraction (CR), a focused Gaussian input beam passing through a biaxial crystal and parallel to one of the optic axes is transformed into a pair of concentric bright rings split by a dark (Poggendorff) ring at the focal plane. Here, we show the generation of a CR transverse pattern that does not present the Poggendorff fine splitting at the focal plane, i.e., it forms a single light ring. This light ring is generated from a nonhomogeneously polarized input light beam obtained by using a spatially inhomogeneous polarizer that mimics the characteristic CR polarization distribution. This polarizer allows modulating the relative intensity between the two CR light cones in accordance with the recently proposed dual-cone model of the CR phenomenon. We show that the absence of interfering rings at the focal plane is caused by the selection of one of the two CR cones.
- Authors
- A. Turpin, J. Mompart, H. Tomizawa, T. K. Kalkandjiev, i Yu. V. Loiko
- Citation Key
- Turpin:15
- COinS Data
- Date Published
- 2015-04-10 10:54
- DOI
- 10.1364/OL.40.001639
- Keywords
- Birefringence, Crystal optics, Refraction
- Issue
- 8
- Pagination
- 1639–1642
- Publisher
- OSA
- Journal
- Optics Letters
- Start Page
- 1639
- URL
- http://ol.osa.org/abstract.cfm?URI=ol-40-8-1639
- Volume
- 40
- Year of Publication
- 2015