From Diffraction to Refraction: a coherence-based conceptual framework
Riccardo Castagna, Gautam Singh, Cristiano Riminesi, Andrea Di Donato, Rossen Todorov

TL;DR
This paper proposes a coherence-based framework that explains refraction as a phase coherence phenomenon within homogeneous media, extending traditional geometric optics to include coherence effects.
Contribution
It introduces a novel coherence-based constitutive relation that generalizes Snell's law to coherence-driven refraction inside bulk media.
Findings
Reproducible angular rotation observed via phase coherence manipulation
Derived a coherence-refraction relation extending Snell's law
Demonstrated phase organization can bend light without index discontinuities
Abstract
Refraction, traditionally viewed as a geometric event occurring at material interfaces, is now being re-examined through the lens of coherence. Recent studies in optics and photonics, including coherence tomography, Moire interference, and coherence-engineered diffraction, indicate that phase organization alone can bend light even without index discontinuities. Fraunhofer-based analyses further show that angular deflection can arise from intrinsic phase curvature within homogeneous media. Here we introduce a coherence-based constitutive framework that systematizes these observations: refraction can occur inside a bulk medium when coherence itself provides the effective boundary. Two near-frequency structured beams write and probe a shared phase field, revealing reproducible angular rotation and coherence-lensing whose direction and magnitude follow the spectral detuning. The key…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrbital Angular Momentum in Optics · Metamaterials and Metasurfaces Applications · Nonlinear Photonic Systems
