Beam Steering And Manipulating Apparatus And Method
20170205683 ยท 2017-07-20
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02F1/0102
PHYSICS
H01Q3/30
ELECTRICITY
H01Q3/26
ELECTRICITY
G02F1/29
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
An apparatus and method for electromagnetic beam steering and manipulating employ narrow beams in close proximity. The beam width and distance between neighboring beams are arranged around or smaller than the wavelength. In an aspect, a strong beam is steered by a much weaker beam. In another aspect, a strong beam is focused by a small group of much weaker beams.
Claims
1. A method for manipulating electromagnetic waves of a predetermined wavelength, comprising: 1) generating a single first electromagnetic beam; 2) generating at least one second electromagnetic beam; 3) adjusting phase of the at least one second electromagnetic beam; 4) the method arranged such that the first beam has beam width smaller than one and a half times of the predetermined wavelength along a predetermined first direction and the first beam and one of the at least one second beam are spaced apart by a distance smaller than one and a half times of the predetermined wavelength along the first direction; 5) the method arranged such that power of the first beam is at least twice power of each of the at least one second beam; and 6) mixing the first beam and the at least one second beam to produce a third beam, wherein propagation characteristics of the third beam is influenced by the at least one second beam.
2. The method according to claim 1, further including steering the third beam using the adjusting step.
3. The method according to claim 1 wherein beam width of the at least one second beam is arranged smaller than one and a half times of the predetermined wavelength along the first direction.
4. The method according to claim 1, further including generating at least one fourth electromagnetic beam, the first beam and one of the at least one fourth beam being configured to separate by a distance smaller than one and a half times of the predetermined wavelength along a predetermined second direction.
5. The method according to claim 4, further including adjusting phase of the at least one fourth beam.
6. The method according to claim 1, further including converting the third beam into a fifth electromagnetic beam.
7. The method according to claim 1 wherein the first beam or the at least one second beam is generated using an emitting source, wherein the emitting source includes waveguide, slit, small opening, or small sized generator.
8. A method for manipulating electromagnetic waves of a predetermined wavelength, comprising: 1) generating a single first electromagnetic beam; 2) generating a plurality of second electromagnetic beams; 3) adjusting phase of the plurality of second beams respectively; 4) the method arranged such that the first beam and the plurality of second beams each have beam width smaller than one and a half times of the predetermined wavelength along a predetermined first direction; 5) the method arranged such that power of the first beam is larger than total power of the plurality of second beams; and 6) mixing the first beam and the plurality of second beams to produce a third electromagnetic beam, wherein propagation characteristics of the third beam is influenced by the plurality of second beams.
9. The method according to claim 8, further including generating at least one fourth electromagnetic beam, wherein the method is arranged such that one of the at least one fourth beam is spaced apart from the first beam by a distance smaller than one and a half times of the predetermined wavelength along a predetermined second direction.
10. The method according to claim 8 wherein one of the first beam and the plurality of second beams is spaced apart from another of the first beam and the plurality of second beams by a distance smaller than one and a half times of the predetermined wavelength along the first direction.
11. The method according to claim 8, further including arranging the third beam to converge at a place.
12. The method according to claim 8, further including converting the third beam into a fifth electromagnetic beam.
13. The method according to claim 8, further including steering the third beam in a two-dimensional or three-dimensional space.
14. The method according to claim 8 wherein the first beam or the plurality of second beams is generated using an emitting source, wherein the emitting source includes waveguide, slit, small opening, or small sized generator.
15. An method for manipulating electromagnetic waves of a predetermined wavelength, comprising: 1) generating a single first electromagnetic beam; 2) generating at least one second electromagnetic beam and at least one third electromagnetic beam respectively; 3) adjusting phase of the at least one second beam and the at least one third beam respectively; 4) the method arranged such that the first beam has beam width smaller than one and a half times of the predetermined wavelength along a predetermined first direction and along a predetermined second direction respectively, the first beam and one of the at least one second beam are spaced apart along the first direction, and the first beam and one of the at least one third beam are spaced along the second direction, wherein the first and second directions are arranged to be different; 5) the method arranged such that power of the first beam is larger than total power of the second and third beams; and 6) mixing the first, second, and third beams with each other for producing a fourth electromagnetic beam, wherein propagation characteristics of the fourth beam is influenced by the second and third beams.
16. The method according to claim 15 wherein beam width of the second and third beams is arranged smaller than one and a half times of the predetermined wavelength along the first and second directions respectively.
17. The method according to claim 15 wherein the first beam and one of the at least one second beam are spaced apart by a distance smaller than one and a half times of the predetermined wavelength along the first direction, and the first beam and one of the at least one third beam are spaced apart by a distance smaller than one and a half times of the predetermined wavelength along the second direction.
18. The method according to claim 15, further including steering the fourth beam in a three-dimensional space.
19. The method according to claim 15, further including converting the fourth beam into a fifth electromagnetic beam.
20. The method according to claim 15 wherein the first beam, the at least one second beam, or the at least one third beam is generated using an emitting source, wherein the emitting source includes waveguide, slit, small opening, or small sized generator.
Description
DRAWING FIGURES
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
TABLE-US-00001 REFERENCE NUMERALS IN DRAWINGS 6 Light source 7 Light source 8 Light source 10 Beam 11 Beam 12 Beam 14 Waveguide 16 Waveguide 18 Beam 20 Beam 22 Beam 24 Beam 26 Beam 28 Beam 29 Beam 30 Beam 32 Waveguide 34 Waveguide 36 Waveguide 38 Beam 40 Beam 42 Beam 44 Lens system 46 Lens system
DETAILED DESCRIPTIONFIG. 1PRIOR-ART
[0026]
FIGS. 2-A to 2-C and 3-A and 3-B Embodiments of Beam Steering Apparatus and Method
[0027]
[0028] It is noted that beam 12 has at most half the power of beam 10, but the former can be used to change the propagation characteristics of the resultant beam by adjusting phase relationship between beams 10 and 12. In other words, a weak beam can be employed as a control beam to influence a strong signal beam, and the resultant beam can work as an output beam. The signal beam may be used to control propagation of the resultant beam, or it may carry signals in a communication system and the output beam may be used as a result of signal processing. The output beam may also be used as a probe beam in remote sensing systems.
[0029] As a control beam, low power level is desirable for reducing system power consumption. A relatively weak control beam also cuts power loss of the corresponding resultant beam, as the resultant beam comes from interference between signal and control beams. In addition, a relatively weak control beam contributes to maintaining beam quality of the resultant beam, especially when a signal beam is much stronger than a control beam. Back to
[0030]
FIGS. 4-A to 4-D Embodiment of Beam Steering Apparatus
[0031] Depicted in
FIGS. 5-A to 5-C, 6-A, and 6-B Embodiment of Beam Steering and Manipulation
[0032]
[0033]
[0034] Furthermore, beams 10, 11, and 12 can be combined to form a converging beam; or in other words, beam 10 can be focused by beams 11 and 12, when three beams have a matching phase at a point, that is, the focal point. As illustrated in
FIGS. 7 and 8 Embodiment of Beam Manipulation
[0035]
[0036] In
CONCLUSION, RAMIFICATIONS, AND SCOPE
[0037] Thus it can be seen that apparatus and methods are introduced to steer or manipulate a strong beam using one weak beam or a small number of weak beams.
[0038] The described embodiments have the following features and advantages: [0039] (1). One or more weak beams are employed to steer or manipulate a strong beam; [0040] (2). A smaller number of weak beams are employed to focus a strong beam; [0041] (3). A simple and compact structure; and [0042] (4). Increased power efficiency.
[0043] Although the description above contains many specificities, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention but as merely providing illustrations of some of the presently preferred embodiments. Numerous modifications will be obvious to those skilled in the art.
Ramifications:
[0044] Besides providing a beam using waveguide, a beam can also be arranged by a small opening, a small or nano sized source.
[0045] The lens system can be a conventional bulk-optics lens system, or micro-optics lens system, or a beam manipulating system utilizing phase modulation or plasmonics.
[0046] Although around or smaller than the wavelength may mean smaller than one and a half times of the wavelength, in practice, beam width or beam spacing may be arranged smaller than the wavelength in some cases, or much smaller than the wavelength in some other cases. For instance, beam width is 0.5 micron while the wavelength is 1.55 microns for the example described in
[0047] Lastly, more or less beams can be used compared to the examples described in the figures. Thus the quantity of beams in aforementioned cases is exemplary and can be changed to other small numbers.
[0048] Therefore the scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, rather than by the examples given.