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1.
Opt Express ; 25(13): 14935-14943, 2017 Jun 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28788929

RESUMO

Space-variant polarization patterns present in the transverse mode of optical beams highlight disclination patterns of polarization about a singularity, often a C-point. These patterns are important for understanding rotational dislocations and for characterizing complex polarization patterns. Liquid-crystal devices known as q-plates have been used to produce two of the three types of disclination patterns in optical beams: lemons and stars. Here we report the production of the third type of disclination, which is asymmetric, known as the monstar. We do so with elliptically-symmetric q-plates. We present theory and measurements, and find excellent agreement between the two.

2.
J Biophotonics ; 11(10): e201800026, 2018 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29575820

RESUMO

Nacre is a complex biomaterial made of aragonite-tablet bricks and organic mortar that is considerably resilient against breakage. Nacre has been studied with a wide range of laboratory techniques, leading to understanding key fundamentals and informing the creation of bio-inspired materials. In this article, we present an optical polarimetric technique to investigate nacre, taking advantage of the translucence and birefringence of its microcomponents. We focus our study on 3 classes of mollusks that have nacreous shells: bivalve (Pinctada fucata), gastropod (Haliotis asinina and Haliotis rufescens) and cephalopod (Nautilus pompilius). We sent polarized light from a laser through thin samples of nacre and did imaging polarimetry of the transmitted light. We observed clear distinctions between the structures of bivalve and gastropod, due to the spatial variation of their birefringence. The patterns for cephalopod were more similar to bivalve than gastropod. Bleaching of the samples disrupted the transmitted light. Subsequent refilling of the bivalve and gastropod nacre samples with oil produced optical patterns similar to those of unbleached samples. In cephalopod samples, we found that bleaching produced irreversible changes in the optical pattern.


Assuntos
Nácar/metabolismo , Polarimetria de Varredura a Laser , Animais , Cefalópodes/metabolismo , Gastrópodes/metabolismo , Pinctada/metabolismo
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