particle trapping
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anita Devi ◽  
Sumit Yadav ◽  
Arijit De

Abstract Recent theoretical and experimental studies have shed light on how optical trapping dynamics under femtosecond pulsed excitation are fine-tuned by optical and thermal nonlinearities. Here, we present experimental results of nonlinear optical trapping of single and multiple polystyrene beads (of 1 μm diameter). We show how integration and synchronization of bright-filed video microscopy with confocal detection of backscatter provide both spatial and temporal resolution required to capture intricate details of trapping dynamics. Such spatiotemporal detection is promising to have far-reaching applications in exploring controlled optical trapping and manipulations harnessed by optical and thermal nonlinearities.


Author(s):  
Pengming Zhang ◽  
Mahmut Elbistan ◽  
Peter A Horvathy

Abstract Bialynicki-Birula and Charzynski argued that a gravitational wave emitted during the merger of a black hole binary may be approximated by a circularly polarized wave which may in turn trap particles [1]. In this paper we consider particle motion in a class of gravitational waves which includes, besides circularly polarized periodic waves (CPP) [2], also the one proposed by Lukash [3] to study anisotropic cosmological models. Both waves have a 7-parameter conformal symmetry which contains, in addition to the generic 5-parameter (broken) Carroll group, also a 6th isometry. The Lukash spacetime can be transformed by a conformal rescaling of time to a perturbed CPP problem. Bounded geodesics, found both analytically and numerically, arise when the Lukash wave is of Bianchi type VI. Their symmetries can also be derived from the Lukash-CPP relation. Particle trapping is discussed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
xie xi ◽  
xianyou wang ◽  
Changjun Min ◽  
Hai Ma ◽  
Zhangyu Zhou ◽  
...  

Photonics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. 367
Author(s):  
Chaoyang Ti ◽  
Yao Shen ◽  
Yiming Lei ◽  
Yuxiang Liu

Optical trapping of sub−micrometer particles in three dimensions has been attracting increasing attention in a wide variety of fields such as physics, chemistry, and biologics. Optical fibers that allow stable trapping of such particles are not readily available but beneficial in system integration and miniaturization. Here, we present a readily accessible batch fabrication method, namely tubeless fiber pulling assisted chemical etching, to obtain sharp tapered optical fibers from regular telecommunication single−mode fibers. We demonstrated the applications of such fiber tapers in two non−plasmonic optical trapping systems, namely single− and dual−fiber−taper−based trapping systems. We realized single particle trapping, multiple particle trapping, optical binding, and optical guiding with sub−micrometer silica particles. Particularly, using the dual fiber system, we observed the three−dimensional optical trapping of swarm sub−micrometer particles, which is more challenging to realize than trapping a single particle. Because of the capability of sub−micrometer particle trapping and the accessible batch fabrication method, the fiber taper−based trapping systems are highly potential tools that can find many applications in biology and physics.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (34) ◽  
pp. eabi5502
Author(s):  
Junfei Li ◽  
Chen Shen ◽  
Tony Jun Huang ◽  
Steven A. Cummer

Acoustic tweezers use ultrasound for contact-free, bio-compatible, and precise manipulation of particles from millimeter to submicrometer scale. In microfluidics, acoustic tweezers typically use an array of sources to create standing wave patterns that can trap and move objects in ways constrained by the limited complexity of the acoustic wave field. Here, we demonstrate spatially complex particle trapping and manipulation inside a boundary-free chamber using a single pair of sources and an engineered structure outside the chamber that we call a shadow waveguide. The shadow waveguide creates a tightly confined, spatially complex acoustic field inside the chamber without requiring any interior structure that would interfere with net flow or transport. Altering the input signals to the two sources creates trapped particle motion along an arbitrary path defined by the shadow waveguide. Particle trapping, particle manipulation and transport, and Thouless pumping are experimentally demonstrated.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pankaj K. Soni ◽  
Harikrishnan Aravindakshan ◽  
Bharati Kakad ◽  
Amar Kakad

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