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Color Superlensing Could Break Through Diffraction Barrier

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Researcher Sergey Kharinstev and his team at Kazan Federal University recently published a paper in Optics Letters where they detail the design of a new type of metalens capable of imaging beyond the optical diffraction limit. Schematic of the working principle of a disordered TiN/TiO2. Courtesy of Kazan University. A metalens described in the article is a thin composite metal-dielectric film placed on a dielectric substrate; the width is several dozen nanometers. “The light has a wave nature, so there is a diffraction limit which confines the resolution of traditional...Read full article

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    Published: January 2020
    Glossary
    metalens
    A metalens, short for "metasurface lens," is a type of optical lens that uses nanostructured materials to manipulate light at a subwavelength scale. Unlike traditional lenses made of glass or other transparent materials, metalenses do not rely on the curvature of their surface to refract or focus light. Instead, they use carefully engineered patterns of nanostructures, such as nanoscale antennas or dielectric structures, to control the phase and amplitude of light across the lens's surface....
    nano
    An SI prefix meaning one billionth (10-9). Nano can also be used to indicate the study of atoms, molecules and other structures and particles on the nanometer scale. Nano-optics (also referred to as nanophotonics), for example, is the study of how light and light-matter interactions behave on the nanometer scale. See nanophotonics.
    Research & TechnologyEuropemetalensdielectric filmsoptical microscopyStimulated Raman scatteringmagnetronnanoparticlesStokesnanotubesepsilon-near-zeroRussian Science FoundationplasmonicOpticslensesMicroscopynanoTech Pulse

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