Paper
5 January 2024 Polarization-holographic phasometry of the layered vector structure of laser object fields of soft matter polycrystalline layers
Alexander Dubolazov, Alexander Ushenko, Igor Panko, Valeriy Sklyarchuk, Yaroslav Struk, Ivan Mikirin, Jun Zheng, V. Tymchuk
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 12938, Sixteenth International Conference on Correlation Optics; 1293820 (2024) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3014689
Event: International Conference Correlation Optics (COR 2023), 2023, Chernivtsi, Ukraine
Abstract
Optical methods for diagnosing various polycrystalline objects (layers of solid and soft matter) and visualizing their structure occupy a prominent place due to their high informativeness and the possibility of multifunctional (photometric, spectral, polarimetric, and correlation) monitoring of the investigated environment. However, there is currently no unified methodological approach to diagnose such structures. In studies of solid matter layers, methods of speckle optics, Fourier optics, correlation optics, and other branches of classical optics prevail. The main fundamental directions of such research are the results of theoretical and experimental studies of photon transport in soft matter layers, specifically biological tissues. Polarimetric research has formed a separate direction in the field of optical studies of biological tissues. The analysis of the polarization characteristics of scattered radiation allows obtaining qualitatively new results about the morphological and physiological state of biological tissues, including cataracts of the lens, glucose concentration in tissues of diabetic patients, and malignant changes.
© (2024) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Alexander Dubolazov, Alexander Ushenko, Igor Panko, Valeriy Sklyarchuk, Yaroslav Struk, Ivan Mikirin, Jun Zheng, and V. Tymchuk "Polarization-holographic phasometry of the layered vector structure of laser object fields of soft matter polycrystalline layers", Proc. SPIE 12938, Sixteenth International Conference on Correlation Optics, 1293820 (5 January 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3014689
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KEYWORDS
Polarization

Digital holography

Holography

Tissue optics

Biomedical optics

Polarimetry

Tissues

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