4.4 Article

Optical vortex beams with the infinite topological charge

Journal

JOURNAL OF OPTICS
Volume 23, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/2040-8986/abf172

Keywords

optical vortex; phase singularity; Gaussian beam; infinite topological charge; orbital angular momentum; form-invariant beam

Categories

Funding

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [18-29-20003]
  2. RF Ministry of Science and Higher Education as part of the government project of FSRC 'Crystallography and Photonics' RAS (section 5 'Numerical simulation of the form-invariant vortex-argument cosine and Bessel Gaussian beams')

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Gaussian optical vortices with infinite topological charge have a countable number of phase singularities, typically with unitary topological charge, located equidistantly or not on a straight line. Their orbit angular momentum is finite, which can be adjusted by changing the Gaussian beam waist radius. Additionally, a Gaussian beam with a countable number of edge dislocations can be transformed into an infinite-topological-charge beam after an astigmatic transform.
Up to now, Gaussian optical vortices (OVs) were investigated with the finite topological charge (TC). Here, we study an OV with the infinite TC. Such OVs have a countable number of phase singularities (isolated intensity nulls), which typically have the unitary TC and are located either equidistantly or not equidistantly on a straight line in the beam transverse cross section. Such OVs are structurally stable (form-invariant) and their transverse intensity is conserved on propagation, changing only in scale and rotation. Orbital angular momentum (OAM) of such OVs is finite, since only a finite number of screw dislocations are within the Gaussian beam in the area of notable intensity, whereas the other phase singularities are in the periphery (and in the infinity), where the intensity is very small. Increasing the Gaussian beam waist radius leads to the parabolic growth of the OAM of such beams. A unique feature of these beams is that their normalized OAM can be adjusted (both increased and decreased) by simple change of the waist radius of the Gaussian beam. In addition to the two form-invariant beams, we studied a Gaussian beam with a countable number of edge dislocations (zero-intensity lines), which is not form-invariant, but, after an astigmatic transform by a cylindrical lens, also becomes an infinite-topological-charge beam.

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