High-dimensional spatial mode sorting and optical circuit design using multi-plane light conversion
Hlib Kupianskyi, Simon A. R. Horsley, David B. Phillips

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new inverse-design algorithm for high-capacity multi-plane light converters, enabling efficient spatial mode sorting and optical circuit design with fewer phase planes, demonstrated through experimental prototypes.
Contribution
The authors develop a gradient ascent-based inverse-design method that outperforms traditional algorithms, achieving lower cross-talk and higher fidelity in low-plane MPLC designs.
Findings
Successfully sorted up to 55 modes in experiments
Achieved lower modal cross-talk than previous methods
Demonstrated practical high-dimensional spatial mode sorters
Abstract
Multi-plane light converters (MPLCs) are an emerging class of optical device capable of converting a set of input spatial light modes to a new target set of output modes. This operation represents a linear optical transformation - a much sought after capability in photonics. MPLCs have potential applications in both the classical and quantum optics domains, in fields ranging from optical communications, to optical computing and imaging. They consist of a series of diffractive optical elements (the 'planes'), typically separated by free-space. The phase delays imparted by each plane are determined by the process of inverse-design, most often using an adjoint algorithm known as the wavefront matching method (WMM), which optimises the correlation between the target and actual MPLC outputs. In this work we investigate high mode capacity MPLCs to create arbitrary spatial mode sorters and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic and Optical Devices · Neural Networks and Reservoir Computing · Random lasers and scattering media
