The manipulation of structured light beams requires simultaneous spatial modulation of amplitude and phase.Based on the double-phase holography(DPH)algorithm,we demonstrate an efficient reconstruction of Bessel beams ...The manipulation of structured light beams requires simultaneous spatial modulation of amplitude and phase.Based on the double-phase holography(DPH)algorithm,we demonstrate an efficient reconstruction of Bessel beams with arbitrary onaxis intensity.Also,the off-axis DPH method enables more than doubled laser energy utilization compared with the widelyused off-axis phase wrapping modulation method.The DPH algorithm is also used in two-photon polymerization to enable the rapid fabrication of microtube arrays,ortho-hexagonal scaffolds,and 2D patterned microstructures.This work gives experimental proof to show the powerful feasibility of the DPH method in constructing economic adaptive laser processing systems.展开更多
In recent years, cooling technology for liquid xenon(LXe) detectors has advanced driven by the development of dark matter(DM) detectors with target mass in the 100–1000 kg range. The next generation of DM detectors b...In recent years, cooling technology for liquid xenon(LXe) detectors has advanced driven by the development of dark matter(DM) detectors with target mass in the 100–1000 kg range. The next generation of DM detectors based on LXe will be in the 50,000 kg(50 t)range requiring more than 1 k W of cooling power. Most of the prior cooling methods become impractical at this level.For cooling a 50 t scale LXe detector, a method is proposed in which liquid nitrogen(LN2) in a small local reservoir cools the xenon gas via a cold finger. The cold finger incorporates a heating unit to provide temperature regulation. The proposed cooling method is simple, reliable, and suitable for the required long-term operation for a rare event search. The device can be easily integrated into present cooling systems, for example the ‘‘Cooling Bus’ ’employed for the Panda X I and II experiments. It is still possible to cool indirectly with no part of the cooling or temperature control system getting in direct contact with the clean xenon in the detector. Also, the cooling device can be mounted at a large distance, i.e., the detector is cooled remotely from a distance of 5–10 m. The method was tested in a laboratory setup at Columbia University to carry out different measurements with a small LXe detector and behaved exactly as predicted.展开更多
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Nos.62275191,61605142,and 61827821)the Tianjin Research Program of Application Foundation and Advanced Technology of China(No.17JCJQJC43500)the Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics,Chinese Academy of Sciences(Open Fund of the State Key Laboratory of High Field Laser Physics)。
文摘The manipulation of structured light beams requires simultaneous spatial modulation of amplitude and phase.Based on the double-phase holography(DPH)algorithm,we demonstrate an efficient reconstruction of Bessel beams with arbitrary onaxis intensity.Also,the off-axis DPH method enables more than doubled laser energy utilization compared with the widelyused off-axis phase wrapping modulation method.The DPH algorithm is also used in two-photon polymerization to enable the rapid fabrication of microtube arrays,ortho-hexagonal scaffolds,and 2D patterned microstructures.This work gives experimental proof to show the powerful feasibility of the DPH method in constructing economic adaptive laser processing systems.
基金the Ministry of Science and Technology of China(No.2016YFA0400301)the grants for the XENON Dark Matter Project。
文摘In recent years, cooling technology for liquid xenon(LXe) detectors has advanced driven by the development of dark matter(DM) detectors with target mass in the 100–1000 kg range. The next generation of DM detectors based on LXe will be in the 50,000 kg(50 t)range requiring more than 1 k W of cooling power. Most of the prior cooling methods become impractical at this level.For cooling a 50 t scale LXe detector, a method is proposed in which liquid nitrogen(LN2) in a small local reservoir cools the xenon gas via a cold finger. The cold finger incorporates a heating unit to provide temperature regulation. The proposed cooling method is simple, reliable, and suitable for the required long-term operation for a rare event search. The device can be easily integrated into present cooling systems, for example the ‘‘Cooling Bus’ ’employed for the Panda X I and II experiments. It is still possible to cool indirectly with no part of the cooling or temperature control system getting in direct contact with the clean xenon in the detector. Also, the cooling device can be mounted at a large distance, i.e., the detector is cooled remotely from a distance of 5–10 m. The method was tested in a laboratory setup at Columbia University to carry out different measurements with a small LXe detector and behaved exactly as predicted.