Scattering of acoustic waves by a nonlinear resonant bubbly screen Pham, K., J.-F. Mercier, D. Fuster, J.-J. Marigo, and A. Maurel Journal of Fluid Mechanics 906 (2020)
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Reversible Hardware for Acoustic Communications Siljak, H., J. d. Rosny, and M. Fink IEEE Communications Magazine 58, no. 1, 55-61 (2020)
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BEAM STEERING RECONFIGURABLE COMPACT ANTENNA BASED ON HYBRIDIZATION BETWEEN SPLIT RING RESONATORS Rachedi, K., J. De Rosny, Y. Kokar, D. T. Phan Huy, and A. Ourir Progress In Electromagnetics Research M 91, 189-196 (2020)
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Polarization-Based Reconfigurable Tags for Robust Ambient Backscatter Communications Fara, R., D.-T. Phan-Huy, A. Ourir, Y. Kokar, J.-C. Prevotet, M. Helard, M. Di Renzo, and J. De Rosny IEEE Open Journal of the Communications Society 1, 1140-1152 (2020)
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Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces vs. Relaying: Differences, Similarities, and Performance Comparison Di Renzo, M., K. Ntontin, J. Song, F. H. Danufane, X. Qian, F. Lazarakis, J. De Rosny, D.-T. Phan-Huy, O. Simeone, R. Zhang, M. Debbah, G. Lerosey, M. Fink, S. Tretyakov, and S. Shamai IEEE Open Journal of the Communications Society 1, 798-807 (2020)
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Smart Radio Environments Empowered by Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces: How It Works, State of Research, and The Road Ahead Di Renzo, M., A. Zappone, M. Debbah, M.-S. Alouini, C. Yuen, J. De Rosny, and S. Tretyakov IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications 38, no. 11, 2450-2525 (2020)
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Structure-composition correspondence in crystalline metamaterials for acoustic valley-Hall effect and unidirectional sound guiding Yves, S., G. Lerosey, and F. Lemoult Europhysics Letters 129, no. 4, 44001 (2020)
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Mathematical modelling of plasmonic strain sensors Ammari, H., P. Millien, and A. L. Vanel Journal of Inverse and Ill-posed Problems 30, no. 1, 117-126 (2020)
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Perturbation of the scattering resonances of an open cavity by small particles. Part I: the transverse magnetic polarization case Ammari, H., A. Dabrowski, B. Fitzpatrick, and P. Millien Zeitschrift für angewandte Mathematik und Physik 71, no. 4 (2020)
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Artificial light may change flight patterns of bats near bridges along urban waterways Barré, K., K. Spoelstra, Y. Bas, S. Challéat, R.-K. Ing, C. Azam, G. Zissis, D. Lapostolle, C. Kerbiriou, and I. Le Viol Animal Conservation (2020)
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Probing intermittency and reversibility in a dense granular suspension under shear using multiply scattered ultrasound Léopoldès, J., and X. Jia Soft Matter 16, no. 47, 10716-10722 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 The Royal Society of Chemistry. We study the rheology of a dense granular suspension under shear strain with the simultaneous detection of multiply scattered ultrasound through the shear band. At a low shear rate, the dissipation is rate-independent and determined by the frictional contacts between grains. Under quasistatic shear, the stress-strain curve contains elastic loading parts interrupted by stress drops. Such an intermittency is concomitant with some large decorrelation events as measured by the ultrasound probe, sensitive to the position of the grains. Under cyclic shear, the correlations between the scattered ultrasonic waves show that at low shear strain, the grains exhibit reversible motion. Beyond this linear regime, some irreversible motion of the grains is detected. Moreover, the correlation between successive ultrasound signals suggests that some specific rearrangements, which add to the homogeneous flow, take place near the maximum strain.
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Localization of unbounded contacts on vibrating elastic plates Farin, M., C. Palerm, C. Prada, and J. De Rosny Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 148, no. 6, 3455-3466 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Acoustical Society of America. Detection and localization of unbounded contacts in industrial structures are crucial for user safety. However, most structural health monitoring techniques are either invasive, power-consuming, or rely on time-varying baseline comparison. A passive acoustic method is proposed to localize unbounded contacts in plate-like structures, using the acoustic emissions by the contacts when they are excited by ambient noise. The technique consists of computing the correlation matrix of the signals measured by a set of receivers and applying to this matrix a beamforming algorithm accounting for flexural wave dispersion. To validate the technique, an experimental setup is developed in which three idealized unbounded contacts are created on a thin plate excited by a shaker. How the quality of the defect localization depends on the defect type, receiver number, and the characteristics of the noise is investigated. Finally, it is shown that the localization of unbounded contacts is possible using either an acoustic ambient noise source or a more realistic jet engine noise.
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Observations of symmetry-induced topological mode steering in a reconfigurable elastic plate Tang, K., M. Makwana, R. V. Craster, and P. Sebbah Physical Review B 102, no. 21 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 American Physical Society. We experimentally investigate the valley-Hall effect for interfacial edge states, highlighting the importance of the modal patterns between geometrically distinct regions within a structured elastic plate. These experiments, for vibration, are at a scale where detailed measurements are taken throughout the system and not just at the input/output ports; this exposes the coupling between geometrically distinct modes that underlie the differences between wave transport around gentle and sharp bends.
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Experimental teaching — A tribute to Yves Couder by the example: stroboscopy and fluorescence lifetime with a fan Eddi, A., P. Baconnier, M. Blons, S. Pautrel, S. Protière, and E. Fort Comptes Rendus - Mecanique 348, no. 6-7, 439-445 (2020)
Résumé: © Académie des sciences, Paris and the authors, 2020. Yves Couder created “PhyExp” at Paris Diderot University in 80s. This undergraduate course was meant to introduce experimental physics to students through projects. This approach proved fruitful both for students and teachers and has been replicated Ecole Supérieure de Physique et Chimie Industrielles (ESPCI). As a tribute to Yves, we report here the results obtained during this course about a specific project, namely the measurement of fluorescence lifetimes using stroboscopy and a fan. We obtain quantitative measurements for both Europium and Terbium that are commonly used in fluorescent tubes and we further study the variation of the lifetime with temperature.
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Perfect depolarization in single scattering of light from uncorrelated surface and volume disorder Banon, J.-P., I. Simonsen, and R. Carminati Optics Letters 45, no. 23, 6354 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Optical Society of America We demonstrate that single scattering of p-polarized waves from uncorrelated surface and volume disorder can lead to perfect depolarization. The degree of polarization vanishes in specific scattering directions that can be characterized based on simple geometric arguments. Depolarization results from a different polarization response of each source of disorder, which provides a clear physical interpretation of the depolarization mechanism.
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Coherence gate shaping for wide field high-resolution in vivo retinal imaging with full-field OCT Mecê, P., K. Groux, J. Scholler, O. Thouvenin, M. Fink, K. Grieve, and C. Boccara Biomedical Optics Express 11, no. 9, 4928-4941 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement Allying high-resolution with a large field-of-view (FOV) is of great importance in the fields of biology and medicine, but it is particularly challenging when imaging non-flat living samples such as the human retina. Indeed, high-resolution is normally achieved with adaptive optics (AO) and scanning methods, which considerably reduce the useful FOV and increase the system complexity. An alternative technique is time-domain full-field optical coherence tomography (FF-OCT), which has already shown its potential for in-vivo high-resolution retinal imaging. Here, we introduce coherence gate shaping for FF-OCT, to optically shape the coherence gate geometry to match the sample curvature, thus achieving a larger FOV than previously possible. Using this instrument, we obtained high-resolution images of living human photoreceptors close to the foveal center without AO and with a 1 mm × 1 mm FOV in a single shot. This novel advance enables the extraction of photoreceptor-based biomarkers with ease and spatiotemporal monitoring of individual photoreceptors. We compare our findings with AO-assisted ophthalmoscopes, highlighting the potential of FF-OCT, as a compact system, to become a routine clinical imaging technique.
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Adaptive-glasses time-domain FFOCT for wide-field high-resolution retinal imaging with increased SNR Scholler, J., K. Groux, K. Grieve, C. Boccara, and P. Mecê Optics Letters 45, no. 21, 5901-5904 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Optical Society of America The highest three-dimensional (3D) resolution possible in in vivo retinal imaging is achieved by combining optical coherence tomography (OCT) and adaptive optics. However, this combination brings important limitations, such as small field-of-view and complex, cumbersome systems, preventing so far the translation of this technology from the research lab to clinics. In this Letter, we mitigate these limitations by combining our compact time-domain full-field OCT (FFOCT) with a multi-actuator adaptive lens positioned just in front of the eye, in a technique we call the adaptive-glasses wavefront sensorless approach. Through this approach, we demonstrate that ocular aberrations can be corrected, increasing the FFOCT signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and enabling imaging of different retinal layers with a 3D cellular resolution over a 5◦ × 5◦ field-of-view, without apparent anisoplanatism.
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Dirac cones and chiral selection of elastic waves in a soft strip Lanoy, M., F. Lemoult, A. Eddi, and C. Prada Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 202010812 (2020)
Résumé: We study the propagation of in-plane elastic waves in a soft thin
strip, a specific geometrical and mechanical hybrid framework
which we expect to exhibit a Dirac-like cone. We separate the
low frequencies guided modes (typically 100 Hz for a 1-cm-wide
strip) and obtain experimentally the full dispersion diagram. Dirac
cones are evidenced together with other remarkable wave phenomena
such as negative wave velocity or pseudo-zero group
velocity (ZGV). Our measurements are convincingly supported
by a model (and numerical simulation) for both Neumann and
Dirichlet boundary conditions. Finally, we perform one-way chiral
selection by carefully setting the source position and polarization.
Therefore, we show that soft materials support atypical wavebased
phenomena, which is all of the more interesting as they
make most of the biological tissues.
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Curved-field optical coherence tomography: Large-field imaging of human corneal cells and nerves Mazlin, V., K. Irsch, M. Paques, J. A. Sahel, M. Fink, and C. A. Boccara Optica 7, no. 8, 872-880 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement Cell-resolution optical imaging methods, such as confocal microscopy and full-field optical coherence tomography, capture flat optical sections of the sample. If the sample is curved, the optical field sections through several sample layers, and the view of each layer is reduced. Here we present curved-field optical coherence tomography, capable of capturing optical sections of arbitrary curvature. We test the device on a challenging task of imaging the human cornea in vivo and achieve a 10× larger viewing area comparing to the clinical state-of-the-art. This enables more precise cell and nerve counts, opening a path to improved monitoring of corneal and general health conditions (e.g., diabetes). The method is non-contact, compact, and works in a single fast shot (3.5 ms), making it readily available for use in optical research and clinical practice.
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Triggering granular avalanches with ultrasound Léopoldès, J., X. Jia, A. Tourin, and A. Mangeney Physical Review E 102, no. 4 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 American Physical Society. Granular flows triggered by vibration below the avalanche angle are ubiquitous in nature. However, the mechanism of triggering and the nature of the resulting flow are not fully understood. Here we investigate the triggering of the shear instability of granular layers by nanometer-amplitude ultrasound close to the static threshold. We find that such small-amplitude and high-frequency sound waves provoke unjamming, resulting in a self-accelerated inertial flow or a creeplike regime which stops flowing after the removal of ultrasound. We show that these effects are due to the reduction of interparticle friction at grain contacts by the shear acoustic lubrication. Our observations are consistent with the bistability inherent to velocity-weakening friction models [e.g., Jaeger et al., Europhys. Lett. 11, 619 (1990)10.1209/0295-5075/11/7/007]. This work should help to understand the local and remote triggering of landslides and earthquakes by seismic waves.
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Effective Resonant Model and Simulations in the Time-Domain of Wave Scattering from a Periodic Row of Highly-Contrasted Inclusions Touboul, M., K. Pham, A. Maurel, J. J. Marigo, B. Lombard, and C. Bellis Journal of Elasticity 142, no. 1, 53-82 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020, Springer Nature B.V. The time-domain propagation of scalar waves across a periodic row of inclusions is considered in 2D. As the typical wavelength within the background medium is assumed to be much larger than the spacing between inclusions and the row width, the physical configuration considered is in the low-frequency homogenization regime. Furthermore, a high contrast between one of the constitutive moduli of the inclusions and of the background medium is also assumed. So the wavelength within the inclusions is of the order of their typical size, which can further induce local resonances within the microstructure. In Pham et al. (J. Mech. Phys. Solids 106:80–94, 2017), two-scale homogenization techniques and matched-asymptotic expansions have been employed to derive, in the harmonic regime, effective jump conditions on an equivalent interface. This homogenized model is frequency-dependent due to the resonant behavior of the inclusions. In this context, the present article aims at investigating, directly in the time-domain, the scattering of waves by such a periodic row of resonant scatterers. Its effective behavior is first derived in the time-domain and some energy properties of the resulting homogenized model are analyzed. Time-domain numerical simulations are then performed to illustrate the main features of the effective interface model obtained and to assess its relevance in comparison with full-field simulations.
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Phenomenological law for the acoustic reflection by an array of cylindrical cavities in a soft elastic medium Thieury, M., V. Leroy, J. Dassé, and A. Tourin Journal of Applied Physics 128, no. 13 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Author(s). We propose a phenomenological model, built from results obtained by finite-element numerical simulations, for the transmission and reflection of acoustic waves by a two-dimensional array of cylindrical cavities in a soft elastic medium. We show that the acoustic properties of a cylindrical cavity can be described by two geometrical parameters: its aspect ratio (AR) and the radius of the sphere of equivalent volume. Cylinders with AR close to one are acoustically similar to spheres, whereas flat cylinders exhibit a lower resonance frequency and an increased damping due to their ability to emit shear waves. We provide an example of how our new phenomenological analytical model can help to design thin coatings that can turn strong acoustic reflectors into good absorbers.
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Acoustic probing of the particle concentration in turbulent granular suspensions in air Van Den Wildenberg, S., X. Jia, and O. Roche Scientific Reports 10, no. 1 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020, The Author(s). Dilute gas–particle suspensions in which the particles are carried by the fluid are found in various industrial and geophysical contexts. One fundamental issue that limits our understanding of such systems is the difficulty to obtain information on the particle concentration inside these often optically opaque suspensions. To overcome this difficulty, we develop ultrasonic spectroscopy to monitor the local particle concentration ϕ of glass particles (with diameters d∼ 77 μ m or 155 μ m) suspended in air. First, we determine the minimal air velocity, U∗, necessary to suspend the particles from the maximum decrease in the transmitted wave amplitude and velocity of ultrasound propagating through the suspension. Next, setting the air velocity at U∗, we increase the mass of particles and monitor acoustically the local solid volume fraction, ϕ, by measuring the ultrasound wave attenuation coefficient and phase velocity as a function of frequency on the basis of classical scattering and hydrodynamic models. For the frequency ranges and suspensions considered here, the viscous dissipation dominates over scattering and thermal conduction losses. We show that, for a characteristic air velocity U∗, the locally measured ϕ reaches a critical value, in agreement with a recent study on turbulent gas–particle mixtures. Moreover, we find that this critical ϕ increases with the size of the particles. Finally, analysis of the temporal fluctuations of the locally measured solid volume fraction, suggests that high density regions (clusters) are present even in suspensions with concentrations below the critical concentration. This differs from the current hypothesis according to which the critical concentration coincides with the onset of cluster formation.
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Absorption of scalar waves in correlated disordered media and its maximization using stealth hyperuniformity Sheremet, A., R. Pierrat, and R. Carminati Physical Review A 101, no. 5, 053829 (2020)
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Circulating tPA contributes to neurovascular coupling by a mechanism involving the endothelial NMDA receptors Anfray, A., A. Drieu, V. Hingot, Y. Hommet, M. Yetim, M. Rubio, T. Deffieux, M. Tanter, C. Orset, and D. Vivien Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism 40, no. 10, 2038-2054 (2020)
Résumé: © The Author(s) 2019. The increase of cerebral blood flow evoked by neuronal activity is essential to ensure enough energy supply to the brain. In the neurovascular unit, endothelial cells are ideally placed to regulate key neurovascular functions of the brain. Nevertheless, some outstanding questions remain about their exact role neurovascular coupling (NVC). Here, we postulated that the tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) present in the circulation might contribute to NVC by a mechanism dependent of its interaction with endothelial N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor (NMDAR). To address this question, we used pharmacological and genetic approaches to interfere with vascular tPA-dependent NMDAR signaling, combined with laser speckle flowmetry, intravital microscopy and ultrafast functional ultrasound in vivo imaging. We found that the tPA present in the blood circulation is capable of potentiating the cerebral blood flow increase induced by the activation of the mouse somatosensorial cortex, and that this effect is mediated by a tPA-dependent activation of NMDAR expressed at the luminal part of endothelial cells of arteries. Although blood molecules, such as acetylcholine, bradykinin or ATP are known to regulate vascular tone and induce vessel dilation, our present data provide the first evidence that circulating tPA is capable of influencing neurovascular coupling (NVC).
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Measuring Basal Force Fluctuations of Debris Flows Using Seismic Recordings and Empirical Green's Functions Allstadt, K. E., M. Farin, R. M. Iverson, M. K. Obryk, J. W. Kean, V. C. Tsai, T. D. Rapstine, and M. Logan Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface 125, no. 9 (2020)
Résumé: ©2020. The Authors. We present a novel method for measuring the fluctuating basal normal and shear stresses of debris flows by using along-channel seismic recordings. Our method couples a simple parameterization of a debris flow as a seismic source with direct measurements of seismic path effects using empirical Green's functions generated with a force hammer. We test this method using two large-scale (8 and 10 m3) experimental flows at the U.S. Geological Survey debris-flow flume that were recorded by dozens of three-component seismic sensors. The seismically derived basal stress fluctuations compare well in amplitude and timing to independent force plate measurements within the valid frequency range (15–50 Hz). We show that although the high-frequency seismic signals provide band-limited forcing information, there are systematic relations between the fluctuating stresses and independently measured flow properties, especially mean basal shear stress and flow thickness. However, none of the relationships are simple, and since the flow properties also correlate with one another, we cannot isolate a single factor that relates in a simple way to the fluctuating forces. Nevertheless, our observations, most notably the gradually declining ratio of fluctuating to mean basal stresses during flow passage and the distinctive behavior of the coarse, unsaturated flow front, imply that flow style may be a primary control on the conversion of translational to vibrational kinetic energy. This conversion ultimately controls the radiation of high-frequency seismic waves. Thus, flow style may provide the key to revealing the nature of the relationship between fluctuating forces and other flow properties.
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Reflection Matrix Approach for Quantitative Imaging of Scattering Media Lambert, W., L. A. Cobus, M. Couade, M. Fink, and A. Aubry Physical Review X 10, no. 2 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 authors. Published by the American Physical Society. We present a physically intuitive matrix approach for wave imaging and characterization in scattering media. The experimental proof of concept is performed with ultrasonic waves, but this approach can be applied to any field of wave physics for which multielement technology is available. The concept is that focused beam forming enables the synthesis, in transmit and receive, of an array of virtual transducers which map the entire medium to be imaged. The interelement responses of this virtual array form a focused reflection matrix from which spatial maps of various characteristics of the propagating wave can be retrieved. Here we demonstrate (i) a local focusing criterion that enables the image quality and the wave velocity to be evaluated everywhere inside the medium, including in random speckle, and (ii) a highly resolved spatial mapping of the prevalence of multiple scattering, which constitutes a new and unique contrast for ultrasonic imaging. The approach is demonstrated for a controllable phantom system and for in vivo imaging of the human abdomen. More generally, this matrix approach opens an original and powerful route for quantitative imaging in wave physics.
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Probing Floquet modes in a time periodic system with time defects using Faraday instability D', G. hardemare, A. Eddi, and E. Fort EPL (Europhysics Letters) 131, no. 2 (2020)
Résumé: © Copyright 2020 EPLA. Time crystals are systems whose properties are periodically modulated in time. Among these, Floquet time crystals exhibit momentum gaps in their band structures, analogous to energy gaps in spatial crystals. Recently, time defects with a π-shift in the time modulation have been introduced theoretically as temporal analogues of spatial topological defects associated with localized edge modes. Here we perform experiments in a time periodic system using Faraday instability, a parametric excitation of a liquid bath by vertical shaking. Although time defects also trigger an exponentially decaying wave, we show that the analogy does not hold due to temporal causality and lack of energy conservation. However, these time defects provide an original way to explore momentum gaps and reveal their overdamped modes.
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Distortion matrix concept for deep optical imaging in scattering media Badon, A., V. Barolle, K. Irsch, A. Claude Boccara, M. Fink, and A. Aubry Science Advances 6, no. 30 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial License 4.0 (CC BY-NC). In optical imaging, light propagation is affected by the inhomogeneities of the medium. Sample-induced aberrations and multiple scattering can strongly degrade the image resolution and contrast. On the basis of a dynamic correction of the incident and/or reflected wavefronts, adaptive optics has been used to compensate for those aberrations. However, it only applies to spatially invariant aberrations or to thin aberrating layers. Here, we propose a global and noninvasive approach based on the distortion matrix concept. This matrix basically connects any focusing point of the image with the distorted part of its wavefront in reflection. A singular value decomposition of the distortion matrix allows to correct for high-order aberrations and forward multiple scattering over multiple isoplanatic modes. Proof-of-concept experiments are performed through biological tissues including a turbid cornea. We demonstrate a Strehl ratio enhancement up to 2500 and recover a diffraction-limited resolution until a depth of 10 scattering mean free paths.
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Reconstruction of bi-dimensional images in Fourier-transform acousto-optic imaging Bocoum, M., J.-L. Gennisson, A. A. Grabar, F. Ramaz, and J.-M. Tualle Optics Letters 45, no. 17, 4855-4858 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Optical Society of America We present a new, to the best of our knowledge, method to perform acousto-optic imaging based on a spatiotemporal structuration of long-duration acoustic plane waves. This approach is particularly relevant when using detectors with long integration times. We show how it is possible to reconstruct an image by measuring its two-dimensional Fourier components. A proof of concept is presented using a photorefractive detection scheme, demonstrating equal performances to direct imaging. The overall acquisition time is compatible with medical monitoring applications.
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Optical incoherence tomography: A method to generate tomographic retinal cross-sections with non-interferometric adaptive optics ophthalmoscopes Mecê, P., E. Gofas-Salas, M. Paques, K. Grieve, and S. Meimon Biomedical Optics Express 11, no. 8, 4069-4084 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement We present Optical Incoherence Tomography (OIT): a completely digital method to generate tomographic retinal cross-sections from en-face through-focus image stacks acquired by non-interferometric imaging systems, such as en-face adaptive optics (AO)-ophthalmoscopes. We demonstrate that OIT can be applied to different imaging modalities using back-scattered light, including systems without inherent optical sectioning and, for the first time, multiply-scattered light, revealing a distinctive cross-sectional view of the retina. The axial dimension of OIT cross-sections is given in terms of focus position rather than optical path, as in OCT. We explore this property to guide focus position in cases where the user is “blind” focusing, allowing precise plane selection for en-face imaging of retinal pigment epithelium, the vascular plexuses and translucent retinal neurons, such as photoreceptor inner segments and retinal ganglion cells, using respectively autofluorescence, motion contrast and split detection techniques.
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Reverse contrast laser Doppler holography for lower frame rate retinal and choroidal blood flow imaging Puyo, L., M. Paques, and M. Atlan Optics Letters 45, no. 14, 4012-4015 (2020)
Résumé: ©2020 Optical Society of America. Laser Doppler holography (LDH) is an interferometric blood flow imaging technique based on full-field measurements of the Doppler spectrum. LDH has so far been demonstrated in the retina with ultrafast cameras, typically at 75 kHz.We show here that a similar method can be implemented with camera frame rates 10 times slower than before.Due to energy conservation, low and high frequency local power Doppler signals have opposite variations, and a simple contrast inversion of the low frequency power Doppler reveals fast blood flowbeyond the camera detection bandwidth for conventional laser Doppler measurements. Relevant blood flow variations and color composite power Doppler images can be obtained with camera frame rates downto a few kHz.
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Full-field optical coherence tomography for the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis Maldiney, T., H. Greigert, L. Martin, E. Benoit, C. Creuzot-Garcher, P.-H. Gabrielle, J.-M. Chassot, C. Boccara, D. Balvay, B. Tavitian, O. Clément, S. Audia, B. Bonnotte, and M. Samson PLOS ONE 15, no. 8 August, e0234165 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Maldiney et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Histopathological examination of temporal artery biopsy (TAB) remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis (GCA) but is associated with essential limitations that emphasize the need for an upgraded pathological process. This study pioneered the use of full-field optical coherence tomography (FF-OCT) for rapid and automated on-site pathological diagnosis of GCA. Sixteen TABs (12 negative and 4 positive for GCA) were selected according to major histopathological criteria of GCA following hematoxylin-eosin-saffronstaining for subsequent acquisition with FF-OCT to compare structural modifications of the artery cell wall and thickness of each tunica. Gabor filtering of FF-OCT images was then used to compute TAB orientation maps and validate a potential automated analysis of TAB sections. FF-OCT allowed both qualitative and quantitative visualization of the main structures of the temporal artery wall, from the internal elastic lamina to the vasa vasorum and red blood cells, unveiling a significant correlation with conventional histology. FF-OCT imaging of GCA TABs revealed destruction of the media with distinct remodeling of the whole arterial wall into a denser reticular fibrous neo-intima, which is distinctive of GCA pathogenesis and accessible through automated Gabor filtering. Rapid on-site FF-OCT TAB acquisition makes it possible to identify some characteristic pathological lesions of GCA within a few minutes, paving the way for potential machine intelligence-based or even non-invasive diagnosis of GCA.
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Floating under a levitating liquid Apffel, B., F. Novkoski, A. Eddi, and E. Fort Nature 585, no. 7823, 48-52 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. When placed over a less dense medium, a liquid layer will typically collapse downwards if it exceeds a certain size, as gravity acting on the lower liquid interface triggers a destabilizing effect called a Rayleigh–Taylor instability1,2. Of the many methods that have been developed to prevent the liquid from falling3–6, vertical shaking has proved to be efficient and has therefore been studied in detail7–13. Stabilization is the result of the dynamical averaging effect of the oscillating effective gravity. Vibrations of liquids also induce other paradoxical phenomena such as the sinking of air bubbles14–19 or the stabilization of heavy objects in columns of fluid at unexpected heights20. Here we take advantage of the excitation resonance of the supporting air layer to perform experiments with large levitating liquid layers of up to half a litre in volume and up to 20 centimetres in width. Moreover, we predict theoretically and show experimentally that vertical shaking also creates stable buoyancy positions on the lower interface of the liquid, which behave as though the gravitational force were inverted. Bodies can thus float upside down on the lower interface of levitating liquid layers. We use our model to predict the minimum excitation needed to withstand falling of such an inverted floater, which depends on its mass. Experimental observations confirm the possibility of selective falling of heavy bodies. Our findings invite us to rethink all interfacial phenomena in this exotic and counter-intuitive stable configuration.
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Dynamic full-field optical coherence tomography: 3D live-imaging of retinal organoids Scholler, J., K. Groux, O. Goureau, J. A. Sahel, M. Fink, S. Reichman, C. Boccara, and K. Grieve Light: Science and Applications 9, no. 1 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020, The Author(s). Optical coherence tomography offers astounding opportunities to image the complex structure of living tissue but lacks functional information. We present dynamic full-field optical coherence tomography as a technique to noninvasively image living human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived retinal organoids. Coloured images with an endogenous contrast linked to organelle motility are generated, with submicrometre spatial resolution and millisecond temporal resolution, creating a way to identify specific cell types in living tissue via their function.
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Tuning a regular cavity to wave chaos with metasurface-reconfigurable walls Gros, J. B., P. Del Hougne, and G. Lerosey Physical Review A 101, no. 6 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 American Physical Society Wave-chaotic systems underpin a wide range of research activities from fundamental studies of quantum chaos via electromagnetic compatibility up to more recently emerging applications, such as microwave imaging for security screening, antenna characterization, or wave-based analog computation. To implement a wave-chaotic system experimentally, traditionally cavities of elaborate geometries (bow tie shapes, truncated circles, or parallelepipeds with hemispheres) are employed because the geometry dictates the wave field's characteristics. Here, we propose and experimentally verify a conceptually different approach: a cavity of regular geometry but with tunable boundary conditions, experimentally implemented by leveraging a reconfigurable metasurface reflect array. This approach offers an alternative stirring mechanism and enables a fuller study of random matrix theory in connection with wave chaos.
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Measuring of translational and rotational local temperatures of a single gold nanocrescent in glycerol Vu, X. H., T. T. H. Pham, E. Fort, M. Levy, H. N. Tran, L. D. Thanh, N. Xuan Ca, P. Van Do, and H. T. Van Optik 219 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Elsevier GmbH The gold nanocrescent (NC) particles possess a strong plasmon resonance which gives them a strong scattering cross section. They can thus be easily tracked using dark-field microscopy. In this study, we improved the optical configuration setup of dark-field video microscope to simultaneously measure the translational and rotational local temperatures within a glycerol medium. The translational and rotational local temperatures have been measured on the same single gold nanocrescent particle when it was excited by green and red laser. The rotational local temperature was measured by the technique of rotational scattering correlation spectroscopy (RSCS) and the translational local temperature was measured by tracking a single nanoparticle technique through the determination of translational diffusion coefficient under Brownian motion. The result showed that the translational local temperature was significant lower than the rotational local temperature for the same single gold nanocrescent. Remarkablely, we can affirm that the heterogeneity of the optical environment leads to the difference between these two temperatures. The obtained results have a great potential to probe the local nanorheology of a material.
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Functional ultrasound imaging of deep visual cortex in awake nonhuman primates Blaize, K., F. Arcizet, M. Gesnik, H. Ahnine, U. Ferrari, T. Deffieux, P. Pouget, F. Chavane, M. Fink, J. A. Sahel, J. A. Sahel, J. A. Sahel, M. Tanter, and S. Picaud Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 117, no. 25, 14453-14463 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Deep regions of the brain are not easily accessible to investigation at the mesoscale level in awake animals or humans. We have recently developed a functional ultrasound (fUS) technique that enables imaging hemodynamic responses to visual tasks. Using fUS imaging on two awake nonhuman primates performing a passive fixation task, we constructed retinotopic maps at depth in the visual cortex (V1, V2, and V3) in the calcarine and lunate sulci. The maps could be acquired in a single-hour session with relatively few presentations of the stimuli. The spatial resolution of the technology is illustrated by mapping patterns similar to ocular dominance (OD) columns within superficial and deep layers of the primary visual cortex. These acquisitions using fUS suggested that OD selectivity is mostly present in layer IV but with extensions into layers II/III and V. This imaging technology provides a new mesoscale approach to the mapping of brain activity at high spatiotemporal resolution in awake subjects within the whole depth of the cortex.
Mots-clés: Brain imaging; Functional ultrasound imaging; Nonhuman primate; Ocular dominance; Visual cortex
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Distortion matrix approach for ultrasound imaging of random scattering media Lambert, W., L. A. Cobus, T. Frappart, M. Fink, and A. Aubry Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 117, no. 26, 14645-14656 (2020)
Résumé: Focusing waves inside inhomogeneous media is a fundamental problem for imaging. Spatial variations of wave velocity can strongly distort propagating wave fronts and degrade image quality. Adaptive focusing can compensate for such aberration but is only effective over a restricted field of view. Here, we introduce a full-field approach to wave imaging based on the concept of the distortion matrix. This operator essentially connects any focal point inside the medium with the distortion that a wave front, emitted from that point, experiences due to heterogeneities. A time-reversal analysis of the distortion matrix enables the estimation of the transmission matrix that links each sensor and image voxel. Phase aberrations can then be unscrambled for any point, providing a full-field image of the medium with diffraction-limited resolution. Importantly, this process is particularly efficient in random scattering media, where traditional approaches such as adaptive focusing fail. Here, we first present an experimental proof of concept on a tissue-mimicking phantom and then, apply the method to in vivo imaging of human soft tissues. While introduced here in the context of acoustics, this approach can also be extended to optical microscopy, radar, or seismic imaging.
Mots-clés: acoustic speckle; complex media; sample-induced aberrations; transmission matrix imaging; waves
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Effective model for elastic waves propagating in a substrate supporting a dense array of plates/beams with flexural resonances Marigo, J.-J., K. Pham, A. Maurel, and S. Guenneau Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 143 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 We consider the effect of an array of plates or beams over a semi-infinite elastic ground on the propagation of elastic waves hitting the interface. The plates/beams are slender bodies with flexural resonances at low frequencies able to perturb significantly the propagation of waves in the ground. An effective model is obtained using asymptotic analysis and homogenization techniques, which can be expressed in terms of the ground alone with effective dynamic (frequency-dependent) boundary conditions of the Robin's type. For an incident plane wave at oblique incidence, the displacement fields and the reflection coefficients are obtained in closed forms and their validity is inspected by comparison with direct numerics in a two-dimensional setting.
Mots-clés: Asymptotic analysis; Elastic waves; Metamaterials; Metasurfaces; Multimodal method
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Telecom wavelength optical processor for wideband spectral analysis of radiofrequency signals Louchet-Chauvet, A., P. Berger, P. Nouchi, D. Dolfi, A. Ferrier, P. Goldner, and L. Morvan Laser Physics 30, no. 6 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Astro Ltd. In this paper we present a spectral analyzer for wideband RF signals with a spectral hole-burning-based architecture operating at telecom wavelength. This device is based on a codoped Er3 +:Sc3 +:Y2SiO5 crystal whose inhomogeneous linewidth allows for wideband operation. With time-resolved holeburning spectroscopy experiments we study the homogeneous linewidth and spectral diffusion in an unusual magnetic field configuration. We finally demonstrate the spectral analysis of RF signals with 28 GHz instantaneous bandwidth and MHz resolution. This work opens the way towards more complex architectures such as direction finding with wideband capacity.
Mots-clés: rare-earth doped crystals; spectral analysis; spectral holeburning
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Origin of transparency in scattering biomimetic collagen materials Salameh, C., F. Salviat, E. Bessot, M. Lama, J.-M. Chassot, E. Moulongui, Y. Wang, M. Robin, A. Bardouil, M. Selmane, F. Artzner, A. Marcellan, C. Sanchez, M.-M. Giraud-Guille, M. Faustini, R. Carminati, and N. Nassif Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 117, no. 22, 11947-11953 (2020)
Résumé: Living tissues, heterogeneous at the microscale, usually scatter light. Strong scattering is responsible for the whiteness of bones, teeth, and brain and is known to limit severely the performances of biomedical optical imaging. Transparency is also found within collagen-based extracellular tissues such as decalcified ivory, fish scales, or cornea. However, its physical origin is still poorly understood. Here, we unveil the presence of a gap of transparency in scattering fibrillar collagen matrices within a narrow range of concentration in the phase diagram. This precholesteric phase presents a three-dimensional (3D) orientational order biomimetic of that in natural tissues. By quantitatively studying the relation between the 3D fibrillar network and the optical and mechanical properties of the macroscopic matrices, we show that transparency results from structural partial order inhibiting light scattering, while preserving mechanical stability, stiffness, and nonlinearity. The striking similarities between synthetic and natural materials provide insights for better understanding the occurring transparency.
Mots-clés: collagen; mechanical properties; photonic materials; self-assembly; transparency
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Single scattering of polarized light by correlated surface and volume disorder Banon, J.-P., I. Simonsen, and R. Carminati Physical Review A 101, no. 5 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 American Physical Society. We study light scattering by systems combining randomly rough surface and volume dielectric fluctuations. We introduce a general model including correlations between surface and volume disorders, and we study the scattering properties within a single-scattering approach. We identify different regimes of surface and volume dominated scattering depending on length scales characterizing the surface and volume disorders. For uncorrelated disorders, we discuss the polarization response of each source of disorder, and show how polarimetric measurements can be used to separate the surface and volume contributions in the total measured diffusely scattered intensity. For correlated systems, we identify two configurations of volume disorder which, respectively, couple weakly or strongly to surface scattering via surface-volume cross correlations. We illustrate these effects on different configurations exhibiting interference patterns in the diffusely scattered intensity, which may be of interest for the characterization of complex systems or for the design of optical components by engineering the degree of surface-volume correlations.
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Spatio-temporal filtering in laser Doppler holography for retinal blood flow imaging Puyo, L., M. Paques, and M. Atlan Biomedical Optics Express 11, no. 6, 3274-3287 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement. Laser Doppler holography (LDH) is a full-field interferometric imaging technique recently applied in ophthalmology to measure blood flow, a parameter of high clinical interest. From the temporal fluctuations of digital holograms acquired at ultrafast frame rates, LDH reveals retinal and choroidal blood flow with a few milliseconds of temporal resolution. However, LDH experiences difficulties to detect slower blood flow as it requires to work with low Doppler frequency shifts which are corrupted by eye motion. We here demonstrate the use of a spatiotemporal decomposition adapted from Doppler ultrasound that provides a basis appropriate to the discrimination of blood flow from eye motion. A singular value decomposition (SVD) can be used as a simple, robust, and efficient way to separate the Doppler fluctuations of blood flow from those of strong spatial coherence such as eye motion. We show that the SVD outperforms the conventional Fourier based filter to reveal slower blood flow, and dramatically improves the ability of LDH to reveal vessels of smaller size or with a pathologically reduced blood flow.
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Anomalous Subdiffusion in Living Cells: Bridging the Gap Between Experiments and Realistic Models Through Collaborative Challenges Woringer, M., I. Izeddin, C. Favard, and H. Berry Frontiers in Physics 8 (2020)
Résumé: © Copyright © 2020 Woringer, Izeddin, Favard and Berry. The life of a cell is governed by highly dynamical microscopic processes. Two notable examples are the diffusion of membrane receptors and the kinetics of transcription factors governing the rates of gene expression. Different fluorescence imaging techniques have emerged to study molecular dynamics. Among them, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) and single-particle tracking (SPT) have proven to be instrumental to our understanding of cell dynamics and function. The analysis of SPT and FCS is an ongoing effort, and despite decades of work, much progress remains to be done. In this paper, we give a quick overview of the existing techniques used to analyze anomalous diffusion in cells and propose a collaborative challenge to foster the development of state-of-the-art analysis algorithms. We propose to provide labeled (training) and unlabeled (evaluation) simulated data to competitors all over the world in an open and fair challenge. The goal is to offer unified data benchmarks based on biologically-relevant metrics in order to compare the diffusion analysis software available for the community.
Mots-clés: continuous-time random walks; diffusion in cells; fluorescence correlation spectroscopy; fractional Brownian motion; single-particle tracking
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Corneal stromal stem cells restore transparency after N2 injury in mice Ghoubay, D., M. Borderie, K. Grieve, R. Martos, R. Bocheux, T. M. Nguyen, P. Callard, A. Chédotal, and V. M. Borderie Stem Cells Translational Medicine (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 The Authors. STEM CELLS TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of AlphaMed Press Corneal scarring associated with various corneal conditions is a leading cause of blindness worldwide. The present study aimed to test the hypothesis that corneal stromal stem cells have a therapeutic effect and are able to restore the extracellular matrix organization and corneal transparency in vivo. We first developed a mouse model of corneal stromal scar induced by liquid nitrogen (N2) application. We then reversed stromal scarring by injecting mouse or human corneal stromal stem cells in injured cornea. To characterize the mouse model developed in this study and the therapeutic effect of corneal stromal stem cells, we used a combination of in vivo (slit lamp, optical coherence tomography, in vivo confocal microscopy, optical coherence tomography shear wave elastography, and optokinetic tracking response) and ex vivo (full field optical coherence microscopy, flow cytometry, transmission electron microscopy, and histology) techniques. The mouse model obtained features early inflammation, keratocyte apoptosis, keratocyte transformation into myofibroblasts, collagen type III synthesis, impaired stromal ultrastructure, corneal stromal haze formation, increased corneal rigidity, and impaired visual acuity. Injection of stromal stem cells in N2-injured cornea resulted in improved corneal transparency associated with corneal stromal stem cell migration and growth in the recipient stroma, absence of inflammatory response, recipient corneal epithelial cell growth, decreased collagen type III stromal content, restored stromal ultrastructure, decreased stromal haze, decreased corneal rigidity, and improved vision. Our study demonstrates the ability of corneal stromal stem cells to promote regeneration of transparent stromal tissue after corneal scarring induced by liquid nitrogen.
Mots-clés: cell therapy; corneal stromal scar; limbal stromal stem cells; sphere formation
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Far-Field Wavefront Control of Nonlinear Luminescence in Disordered Gold Metasurfaces Roubaud, G., P. Bondareff, G. Volpe, S. Gigan, S. Bidault, and S. Grésillon Nano Letters 20, no. 5, 3291-3298 (2020)
Résumé: We demonstrate the local optimization of nonlinear luminescence from disordered gold metasurfaces by shaping the phase of femtosecond excitation. This process is enabled by the far-field wavefront control of plasmonic modes delocalized over the sample surface, leading to a coherent enhancement of subwavelength electric fields. In practice, the increase in nonlinear luminescence is strongly sensitive to both the nanometer-scale morphology and the level of structural complexity of the gold metasurface. We typically observe a 2 orders of magnitude enhancement of the luminescence signal for an optimized excitation wavefront compared to a random one. These results demonstrate how disordered metasurfaces made of randomly coupled plasmonic resonators, together with wavefront shaping, provide numerous degrees of freedom to program locally optimized nonlinear responses and optical hotspots.
Mots-clés: disordered media; metasurfaces; nonlinear luminescence; plasmonics; Wavefront shaping
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Influence of the Local Scattering Environment on the Localization Precision of Single Particles Bouchet, D., R. Carminati, and A. P. Mosk Physical Review Letters 124, no. 13, 133903 (2020)
Résumé: We study the fundamental limit on the localization precision for a subwavelength scatterer embedded in a strongly scattering environment, using the external degrees of freedom provided by wavefront shaping. For a weakly scattering target, the localization precision improves with the value of the local density of states at the target position. For a strongly scattering target, the localization precision depends on the dressed polarizability that includes the backaction of the environment. This numerical study provides new insights for the control of the information content of scattered light by wavefront shaping, with potential applications in sensing, imaging, and nanoscale engineering.
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Real-time non-contact cellular imaging and angiography of human cornea and limbus with common-path full-field/SD OCT Mazlin, V., P. Xiao, J. Scholler, K. Irsch, K. Grieve, M. Fink, and A. C. Boccara Nature Communications 11, no. 1 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020, The Author(s). In today’s clinics, a cell-resolution view of the cornea can be achieved only with a confocal microscope (IVCM) in contact with the eye. Here, we present a common-path full-field/spectral-domain OCT microscope (FF/SD OCT), which enables cell-detail imaging of the entire ocular surface in humans (central and peripheral cornea, limbus, sclera, tear film) without contact and in real-time. Real-time performance is achieved through rapid axial eye tracking and simultaneous defocusing correction. Images contain cells and nerves, which can be quantified over a millimetric field-of-view, beyond the capability of IVCM and conventional OCT. In the limbus, palisades of Vogt, vessels, and blood flow can be resolved with high contrast without contrast agent injection. The fast imaging speed of 275 frames/s (0.6 billion pixels/s) allows direct monitoring of blood flow dynamics, enabling creation of high-resolution velocity maps. Tear flow velocity and evaporation time can be measured without fluorescein administration.
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Diagnostic Accuracy of Four Levels of Manual Compression Applied in Supersonic Shear Wave Elastography of the Breast Chamming', F. s, C. Hangard, J.-L. Gennisson, C. Reinhold, and L. S. Fournier Academic Radiology (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 The Association of University Radiologists Purpose: To investigate the diagnostic accuracy of applying four levels of manual pressure in Shear Wave Elastography (SWE) of the breast and to assess inter-rater reliability. Materials and Methods: Single-center prospective preliminary study including patients receiving ultrasound examination of breast lesions as part of routine clinical practice. SWE was performed on 60 breast masses (26 benign and 34 malignant) in 54 patients by a breast fellowship trained radiologist. Stiffness values were compared between benign and malignant masses at four levels of manual compression: none, mild, moderate, and marked. Accuracy of SWE was assessed using receiving operating characteristics analysis at each level. In 18 patients, a second radiologist repeated the SWE acquisitions to evaluate reproducibility. Reproducibility was assessed using intraclass correlation coefficient. Results: Without compression, we observed no significant difference in stiffness (p > 0.99) between benign and malignant lesions, and SWE demonstrated low accuracy (area under the curve = 0.64). Stiffness was higher in malignant lesions at all levels of compression (p < 0.001). SWE demonstrated good accuracy at all three levels of compression (from area under the curve = 0.71 to 0.84 across Emax and Emean), with high interobserver agreement. Conclusion: This preliminary study suggests that not using compression during SWE for breast lesion characterization offers suboptimal results. On the contrary, application of compression yields high diagnostic performance with good interobserver agreement and, as such, should be included in routine clinical practice.
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Hybridized love waves in a guiding layer supporting an array of plates with decorative endings Pham, K., A. Maurel, S. Félix, and S. Guenneau Materials 13, no. 7, 1632 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 by the authors. This study follows from Maurel et al., Phys. Rev. B 98, 134311 (2018), where we reported on direct numerical observations of out-of-plane shear surface waves propagating along an array of plates atop a guiding layer, as a model for a forest of trees. We derived closed form dispersion relations using the homogenization procedure and investigated the effect of heterogeneities at the top of the plates (the foliage of trees). Here, we extend the study to the derivation of a homogenized model accounting for heterogeneities at both endings of the plates. The derivation is presented in the time domain, which allows for an energetic analysis of the effective problem. The effect of these heterogeneous endings on the properties of the surface waves is inspected for hard heterogeneities. It is shown that top heterogeneities affect the resonances of the plates, hence modifying the cut-off frequencies of a wave mathematically similar to the so-called Spoof Plasmon Polariton (SPP) wave, while the bottom heterogeneities affect the behavior of the layer, hence modifying the dispersion relation of the Love waves. The complete system simply mixes these two ingredients, resulting in hybrid surface waves accurately described by our model.
Mots-clés: Elastic energy; Elastic metasurface; Homogenization; Metamaterial; Time domain analysis
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Measuring cell displacements in opaque tissues: dynamic light scattering in the multiple scattering regime Brunel, B., V. Levy, A. Millet, M. E. Dolega, A. Delon, R. Pierrat, and G. Cappello Biomedical Optics Express 11, no. 4, 2277 (2020)
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Wavefront shaping in multimode fibers by transmission matrix engineering Resisi, S., Y. Viernik, S. M. Popoff, and Y. Bromberg APL Photonics 5, no. 3, 036103 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Author(s). We present a new approach for shaping light at the output of a multimode fiber by modulating the transmission matrix of the system rather than the incident light. We apply computer-controlled mechanical perturbations to the fiber and obtain a desired intensity pattern at its output resulting from the changes to its transmission matrix. Using an all-fiber apparatus, we demonstrate focusing light at the distal end of the fiber and dynamic conversion between fiber modes in the few-mode regime. Since in this approach the number of available degrees of control scales with the number of spectral channels and can thus be larger than the number of fiber modes, it potentially opens the door to simultaneous control over multiple inputs and at multiple wavelengths.
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Clustering of bacteria with heterogeneous motility Vourc', T. h, J. Léopoldès, and H. Peerhossaini Physical review. E 101, no. 2-1, 022612 (2020)
Résumé: We study the clustering of a model cyanobacterium Synechocystis into microcolonies. The bacteria are allowed to diffuse onto surfaces of different hardness and interact with the others by aggregation and detachment. We find that soft surfaces give rise to more microcolonies than hard ones. This effect is related to the amount of heterogeneity of bacteria's dynamics as given by the proportion of motile cells. A kinetic model that emphasizes specific interactions between cells, complemented by extensive numerical simulations considering various amounts of motility, describes the experimental results adequately. The high proportion of motile cells enhances dispersion rather than aggregation.
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Nonreciprocal Manipulation of Subwavelength Fields in Locally Resonant Metamaterial Crystals Zangeneh-Nejad, F., N. Kaina, S. Yves, F. Lemoult, G. Lerosey, and R. Fleury IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation 68, no. 3, 1726-1732 (2020)
Résumé: © 2019 IEEE. Locally resonant metamaterial crystals are artificial materials built from small spatially local resonant inclusions periodically arranged at subwavelength scale. Unlike conventional continuous metamaterials, for which spatial dispersion originates mostly (but not exclusively) from the nonlocality of their inclusions, they exhibit large spatially nonlocal effects that emerge solely at the array level because of the periodic structuration of simple spatially local scatterers, often allowing for an intrinsically subwavelength granularity. Herein, we demonstrate the unique relevance of metamaterial crystals to induce nonreciprocal electromagnetic propagation at deep subwavelength scales. This is obtained by combining the breaking of time-reversal symmetry, using an externally biased magnetic material, with appropriate spatial-dispersion engineering, via subwavelength structural modification of the metamaterial crystal. Interestingly, the material unit cell can be scaled down without affecting this functionality, leading to the exciting possibility of largely enhanced wave-matter interaction at deep subwavelength scales. Altogether, our proposal provides an interesting route for transposing the rich physics of nonreciprocal systems down to the subwavelength scale.
Mots-clés: Metamaterials; nonreciprocity; parity-time symmetry; subwavelength wave manipulation
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Sensory Neurons Contacting the Cerebrospinal Fluid Require the Reissner Fiber to Detect Spinal Curvature In Vivo Orts-Del', A. immagine, Y. Cantaut-Belarif, O. Thouvenin, J. Roussel, A. Baskaran, D. Langui, F. Koëth, P. Bivas, F. X. Lejeune, P. L. Bardet, and C. Wyart Current Biology 30, no. 5, 827-839.e4 (2020)
Résumé: © 2019 Elsevier Ltd Recent evidence indicates active roles for the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) on body axis development and morphogenesis of the spine, implying CSF-contacting neurons (CSF-cNs) in the spinal cord. CSF-cNs project a ciliated apical extension into the central canal that is enriched in the channel PKD2L1 and enables the detection of spinal curvature in a directional manner. Dorsolateral CSF-cNs ipsilaterally respond to lateral bending although ventral CSF-cNs respond to longitudinal bending. Historically, the implication of the Reissner fiber (RF), a long extracellular thread in the CSF, to CSF-cN sensory functions has remained a subject of debate. Here, we reveal, using electron microscopy in zebrafish larvae, that the RF is in close vicinity with cilia and microvilli of ventral and dorsolateral CSF-cNs. We investigate in vivo the role of cilia and the RF in the mechanosensory functions of CSF-cNs by combining calcium imaging with patch-clamp recordings. We show that disruption of cilia motility affects CSF-cN sensory responses to passive and active curvature of the spinal cord without affecting the Pkd2l1 channel activity. Because ciliary defects alter the formation of the RF, we investigated whether the RF contributes to CSF-cN mechanosensitivity in vivo. Using a hypomorphic mutation in the scospondin gene that forbids the aggregation of SCO-spondin into a fiber, we demonstrate in vivo that the RF per se is critical for CSF-cN mechanosensory function. Our study uncovers that neurons contacting the cerebrospinal fluid functionally interact with the RF to detect spinal curvature in the vertebrate spinal cord. The role of the Reissner fiber, a long extracellular thread running in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), has been, since its discovery in 1860, a subject of debate. Orts-Del'Immagine et al. report that the Reissner fiber plays a critical role in the detection of spinal curvature by sensory neurons contacting the CSF.
Mots-clés: central canal; cerebrospinal fluid; CSF; CSF-cNs; CSF-contacting neurons; KAs; Kolmer-Agduhr cells; mechanoreception; motile cilia; PKD2L1; polycystin kidney disease 2 like 1; RF; SCO-spondin; spinal cord; the Reissner fiber
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In-plane backward and zero group velocity guided modes in rigid and soft strips Laurent, J., D. Royer, and C. Prada The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 147, no. 2, 1302 (2020)
Résumé: Elastic waves guided along bars of rectangular cross sections exhibit complex dispersion. This paper studies in-plane modes propagating at low frequencies in thin isotropic rectangular waveguides through experiments and numerical simulations. These modes result from the coupling at the edge between the first order shear horizontal mode SH0 of phase velocity equal to the shear velocity VT and the first order symmetrical Lamb mode S0 of phase velocity equal to the plate velocity VP. In the low frequency domain, the dispersion curves of these modes are close to those of Lamb modes propagating in plates of bulk wave velocities VP and VT. The dispersion curves of backward modes and the associated zero group velocity (ZGV) resonances are measured in a metal tape using noncontact laser ultrasonic techniques. Numerical calculations of in-plane modes in a soft ribbon of Poisson's ratio ν≈0.5 confirm that, due to very low shear velocity, backward waves and ZGV modes exist at frequencies that are hundreds of times lower than ZGV resonances in metal tapes of the same geometry. The results are compared to theoretical dispersion curves calculated using the method provided in Krushynska and Meleshko [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 129, 1324-1335 (2011)].
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Ultrafast Radial Modulation Imaging Muleki-Seya, P., K. Xu, M. Tanter, and O. Couture IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control 67, no. 3, 598-611 (2020)
Résumé: © 1986-2012 IEEE. Radial modulation imaging improves the detection of microbubbles at high frequency using a dual ultrasonic excitation. However, the synchronization between the imaging pulses is nontrivial because microbubbles need to be interrogated in the compression and the rarefaction phase, and the time-delay difference from dispersion has to be corrected. To address these issues, we propose the use of ultrafast radial modulation imaging (uRMI). In this technique, a beat frequency between the modulation pulse (around 1 MHz) and the ultrafast pulse-repetition frequency was exploited to separate microbubbles from tissue phantom in vitro. This led to a modulated images' set in the spectral domain of the slow time that may then be demodulated through a digital lock-in amplifier to retrieve the contrast image. Ultrafast RMI, applied on a flow phantom with microbubbles, provided a contrast-to-tissue ratio from 7.2 to 14.8 dB at 15 MHz. For flow speed lower than 0.05 mL/min, uRMI (16 dB) provided a better contrast-to-tissue ratio than other techniques: singular value decomposition spatiotemporal filter (11 dB), amplitude modulation (9 dB), or microbubbles disruption (6 dB). This technique may then be suitable to improve the detection of targeted microbubbles, in ultrasound molecular imaging applications, and the detection of extremely slow microbubbles moving in the finest vessels in ultrasound localization microscopy.
Mots-clés: Contrast imaging; microbubbles; radial modulation; ultrafast imaging
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Relocating Single Molecules in Super-Resolved Fluorescence Lifetime Images near a Plasmonic Nanostructure Blanquer, G., B. Van Dam, A. Gulinatti, G. Acconcia, Y. De Wilde, I. Izeddin, and V. Krachmalnicoff ACS Photonics 7, no. 2, 393-400 (2020)
Résumé: Copyright © 2020 American Chemical Society. Single-molecule localization microscopy is a powerful technique with vast potential to study light-matter interactions at the nanoscale. Nanostructured environments can modify the fluorescence emission of single molecules, and the induced decay-rate modification can be retrieved to map the local density of optical states (LDOS). However, the modification of the emitter's point spread function (PSF) can lead to its mislocalization, setting a major limitation to the reliability of this approach. In this paper, we address this by simultaneously mapping the position and decay rate of single molecules and by sorting events by their decay rate and PSF size. With the help of numerical simulations, we are able to infer the dipole orientation and to retrieve the real position of mislocalized emitters. We have applied our approach of single-molecule fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (smFLIM) to study the LDOS modification of a silver nanowire over a field of view of ∼ 10 μm2 with a single-molecule localization precision of ∼ 15 nm. This is possible thanks to the combined use of an EMCCD camera and an array of single-photon avalanche diodes, enabling multiplexed and super-resolved fluorescence lifetime imaging.
Mots-clés: decay rate; local density of optical states (LDOS); mislocalization; point spread function (PSF); single-molecule fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (smFLIM); single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM)
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Light-efficient beamsplitter for Fourier-domain full-field optical coherence tomography Auksorius, E. Optics Letters 45, no. 5, 1240-1243 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Optical Society of America. Any full-field optical coherence tomography (FF-OCT) system wastes almost 75% of light, including 50% of the OCT signal, because it uses a 50/50 beamsplitter (BS) in the standard implementation. Here, a design of a light-efficient BS is presented that loses almost no light when implemented in Fourier-domain FF-OCT. It is based on pupil engineering and a small highly asymmetric BS. The presented signal-tonoise ratio (SNR) analysis demonstrates almost four times improvement over the conventional design. In addition, it is shown that the light-efficient BS can be used to suppress specular reflections from a sample and, thus, further improve the SNR.
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Compact and Mobile Full-Field Optical Coherence Tomography Sensor for Subsurface Fingerprint Imaging Auksorius, E., K. B. Raja, B. Topcu, R. Ramachandra, C. Busch, and C. A. Boccara IEEE Access 8, 15194-15204 (2020)
Résumé: © 2013 IEEE. Conventional fingerprint sensors that are deployed in real-life applications lack the ability to peer inside a finger beyond the external surface. Subsurface information can provide complimentary biometric characteristics associated with the finger. The subsurface fingerprints can also be employed when the quality of the external/surface fingerprints is affected. One of the most promising technologies for imaging below the surface of an external fingerprint is full-field optical coherent tomography (FF-OCT). However, the FF-OCT can be expensive and cumbersome, despite its proven ability for biometric use. In this paper, we describe the design and implementation of a compact, mobile and cost-effective FF-OCT sensor that is stable and easy to use. The newly designed sensor, being 30cm × 30cm × 10cm in size, comprises of a dedicated silicon camera, stable Michelson interferometer and a bright Near-Infra-Red (NIR) light emitting diode. It enables recording of 1.7cm × 1.7cm images of subsurface finger features, such as internal fingerprints and sweat ducts. We show the employability of the newly designed sensor for different applications. Specifically, we validate its usefulness by capturing subsurface fingerprints of 585 subjects leading to 3510 unique fingerprints. The resulting accuracy of 0.74% as Equal Error Rate ( EER ) indicates the backward compatibility of the proposed sensor with the existing commercial off-the-shelf algorithms. Thanks to the large fingerprint database collected in this work we determined the most useful imaging depth for the fingerprint matching purposes to be around 100μm. As an additional advantage, the sensor could be readily used in other applications with little or no modification, such as in vivo skin imaging.
Mots-clés: Biomedical imaging; biometrics; fingerprint recognition; full-field optical coherence tomography; microscopy; optical imaging
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Optimizing Source and Sensor Placement for Sound Field Control: An Overview Koyama, S., G. Chardon, and L. Daudet IEEE/ACM Transactions on Audio Speech and Language Processing 28, 696-714 (2020)
Résumé: © 2014 IEEE. In order to control an acoustic field inside a target region, it is important to choose suitable positions of secondary sources (loudspeakers) and sensors (control points/microphones). This article provides an overview of state-of-the-art source and sensor placement methods in sound field control. Although the placement of both sources and sensors greatly affects control accuracy and filter stability, their joint optimization has not been thoroughly investigated in the acoustics literature. In this context, we reformulate five general source and/or sensor placement methods that can be applied for sound field control. We compare the performance of these methods through extensive numerical simulations in both narrowband and broadband scenarios.
Mots-clés: interpolation; sound field control; sound field reproduction; Source and sensor placement; subset selection
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Tailoring the 3F4 level lifetime in Tm3+: Y3Al5O12 by Eu3+ co-doping for signal processing application Zhang, Z., A. Louchet-Chauvet, L. Morvan, P. Berger, P. Goldner, and A. Ferrier Journal of Luminescence 222 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Elsevier B.V. Tm3+: Y3Al5O12 (Tm:YAG) crystal is a promising material for high-resolution spectral analysis of broadband radio-frequency (RF) signals, where the absorption spectrum is modified via spectral hole burning. In Tm:YAG, the efficiency of the spectral tailoring is limited by the long-lived metastable level 3F4, acting as a bottleneck for the optical pumping mechanism. We demonstrate that co-doping Tm:YAG with Eu3+ ions can significantly shorten the optical lifetime of 3F4 state, while that of 3H4 is essentially conserved. We show with a model that these modified lifetimes allow faster tailoring of the absorption profile. Because of their low cost and easiness of processing, we use Tm3+ and Eu3+ co-doped Y3Al5O12 ceramics to probe the energy transfer efficiency and find the optimal cation co-doping concentration. Furthermore, we show that Eu3+ co-doping increases the inhomogeneous broadening on the Tm3+ optical transition, hence the spectral analysis bandwidth. Finally, we confirm these results on a single crystal grown by the Czochralski method.
Mots-clés: Crystal growth; Rare earth spectroscopy; RF signal processing; Tm,Eu:YAG crystal
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High-resolution in-vivo human retinal imaging using full-field OCT with optical stabilization of axial motion Mecê, P., J. Scholler, K. Groux, and C. Boccara Biomedical Optics Express 11, no. 1, 492-504 (2020)
Résumé: © 2019 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement. Time-domain full-field OCT (FF-OCT) represents an imaging modality capable of recording high-speed en-face sections of a sample at a given depth. One of the biggest challenges to transfer this technique to image in-vivo human retina is the presence of continuous involuntary head and eye axial motion during image acquisition. In this paper, we demonstrate a solution to this problem by implementing an optical stabilization in an FF-OCT system. This was made possible by combining an FF-OCT system, an SD-OCT system, and a high-speed voice-coil translation stage. B-scans generated by the SD-OCT were used to measure the retina axial position and to drive the position of the high-speed voice coil translation stage, where the FF-OCT reference arm is mounted. Closed-loop optical stabilization reduced the RMS error by a factor of 7, significantly increasing the FF-OCT image acquisition efficiency. By these means, we demonstrate the capacity of the FF-OCT to resolve cone mosaic as close as 1.5o from the fovea center with high consistency and without using adaptive optics.
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Retinal Capillary Plexus Pattern and Density from Fovea to Periphery Measured in Healthy Eyes with Swept-Source Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography Lavia, C., P. Mecê, M. Nassisi, S. Bonnin, J. Marie-Louise, A. Couturier, A. Erginay, R. Tadayoni, and A. Gaudric Scientific reports 10, no. 1, 1474 (2020)
Résumé: Optical coherence tomography angiography is evolving towards wider fields of view. As single widefield acquisitions have a lower resolution, preventing an accurate segmentation of vascular plexuses in the periphery, we examined the retinal vascularisation from the macula to the periphery in all retinal quadrants, using 3 × 3-mm volume scans, to obtain montages with sufficient image resolution up to 11 mm from the foveal centre. Images were qualitatively and quantitatively analysed, using C- and B-scan approaches to calculate the capillary density (CD) and the interplexus distance (IPD). Three vascular plexuses (i.e., superficial vascular plexus: SVP, intermediate capillary plexus: ICP, and deep capillary plexus: DCP) were observed up to the mid-periphery in all sectors. The CD of the SVP decreased from about 5 mm of eccentricity, along with ganglion cell density decrease. The CD of the ICP progressively decreased from the fovea towards the periphery, along with the retinal thinning and then vanished from 8 to 9 mm of eccentricity, becoming undetectable beyond. This ICP disappearance resulted in an increased IPD between the SVP and the DCP in an area known to be frequently affected by capillary drop-out in diabetic retinopathy. The DCP only showed a slightly decreased CD towards the retinal periphery.
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Origin and role of the cerebrospinal fluid bidirectional flow in the central canal Thouvenin, O., L. Keiser, Y. Cantaut-Belarif, M. Carbo-Tano, F. Verweij, N. Jurisch-Yaksi, P. L. Bardet, G. Van Niel, F. Gallaire, and C. Wyart eLife 9 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020, Thouvenin et al. Circulation of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) contributes to body axis formation and brain development. Here, we investigated the unexplained origins of the CSF flow bidirectionality in the central canal of the spinal cord of 30 hpf zebrafish embryos and its impact on development. Experiments combined with modeling and simulations demonstrate that the CSF flow is generated locally by caudally-polarized motile cilia along the ventral wall of the central canal. The closed geometry of the canal imposes the average flow rate to be null, explaining the reported bidirectionality. We also demonstrate that at this early stage, motile cilia ensure the proper formation of the central canal. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the bidirectional flow accelerates the transport of particles in the CSF via a coupled convective-diffusive transport process. Our study demonstrates that cilia activity combined with muscle contractions sustain the long-range transport of extracellular lipidic particles, enabling embryonic growth.
Mots-clés: central canal; cerebrospinal fluid; cilia dynamics; embryogenesis; fluid dynamics; long range transport; physics of living systems; zebrafish
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Locally polarized wave propagation through crystalline metamaterials Yves, S., T. Berthelot, G. Lerosey, and F. Lemoult Physical Review B 101, no. 3 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 American Physical Society. Wave propagation control is of fundamental interest in many areas of physics. It can be achieved with wavelength-scaled photonic crystals, hence avoiding low-frequency applications. By contrast, metamaterials are structured on a deep-subwavelength scale, and therefore usually described through homogenization, neglecting the unit-cell structuration. Here, we show with microwaves that, by considering their inherent crystallinity, we can induce wave propagation carrying angular momenta within a subwavelength-scaled collection of wires. Then, inspired by the quantum valley Hall effect in condensed-matter physics, we exploit this bulk circular polarization to create modes propagating along particular interfaces. The latter also carry an edge angular momentum whose conservation during the propagation allows wave routing by design in specific directions. This experimental study not only evidences that crystalline metamaterials are a straightforward tabletop platform to emulate exciting solid-state physics phenomena at the macroscopic scale, but it also opens the door to crystalline polarized subwavelength waveguides.
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High-throughput dark-field full-field optical coherence tomography Auksorius, E., and A. Claude Boccara Optics Letters 45, no. 2, 455-458 (2020)
Résumé: © 2020 Optical Society of America. Full-field optical coherence tomography (FF-OCT) can rapidly acquire 2D en face OCT images through a scattering medium. However, the standard interferometer configurations waste almost 75% of light. In addition, specular reflections can saturate the detector, limiting FF-OCT performance. Here, we report on a high-throughput dark-field (HTDF) FF-OCT configuration that efficiently uses the available light budget and allows suppressing specular reflections. Specifically, we demonstrate that images acquired with the HTDF FF-OCT system have 3.5 times higher signal-to-noise ratio when compared to our previously developed regular FF-OCT system.
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Perfect Brewster transmission through ultrathin perforated films Pham, K., A. Maurel, J. F. Mercier, S. Félix, M. L. Cordero, and C. Horvath Wave Motion 93 (2020)
Résumé: © 2019 We address the perfect transmission of a plane acoustic wave at oblique incidence on a perforated, sound penetrable or rigid, film in two-dimensions. It is shown that the Brewster incidence θ∗ realizing so-called extraordinary transmission due to matched impedances varies significantly when the thickness e of the film decreases. For thick films, i.e. ke≫1 with k the incident wavenumber, the classical effective medium model provides an accurate prediction of the Brewster angle independent of e (this Brewster angle is denoted θB). However, for thinner films with ke<1, θ∗ becomes dependent of e and it deviates from θB. To properly describe this shift, an interface model is used (Marigo et al., 2017) which accurately reproduces the spectra of ultrathin to relatively thick perforated films. Depending on the contrasts in the material properties of the film and of the surrounding matrix, decreasing the film thickness can produce an increase or a decrease of θ∗; it can also produce the disappearance of a perfect transmission or to the contrary its appearance.
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The multi-mode plane wave imaging in the Fourier domain: Theory and applications to fast ultrasound imaging of cracks Merabet, L., S. Robert, and C. Prada NDT and E International 110 (2020)
Résumé: © 2019 Elsevier Ltd The Total Focusing Method (TFM) was generalized about ten years ago to form images with complex ultrasound paths involving reflections and mode conversions at the interfaces of a testing sample. The resulting multi-mode imaging allows to fully image the face of a crack-type defect. More recently, the Plane Wave Imaging (PWI) was revisited to perform multi-mode reconstructions with a small number of transmissions compared to the TFM. In order to further accelerate the imaging process, we propose here to combine plane wave emissions with a fast reconstruction algorithm in the Fourier domain. The method was developed in medical imaging with the pioneering works of J.- Y. Lu, and was studied in a recent paper to form images in solids with direct reconstruction modes. In the present paper, the theory is extended to various reconstruction modes (half-skip and one-skip modes with/without mode conversions), and the imaging method is evaluated with experimental results in a sample featuring different planar defects. We show that the method provides multi-mode images equivalent to those computed with the time-domain PWI, while reducing the computation times by a factor up to 13.
Mots-clés: Fourier-domain reconstruction; Multi-mode imaging; Plane wave; Ultrasonic array
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How a moving passive observer can perceive its environment ? The Unruh effect revisited Fink, M., and J. Garnier Wave Motion 93 (2020)
Résumé: © 2019 Elsevier B.V. We consider a point-like observer that moves in a medium illuminated by noise sources with Lorentz-invariant spectrum. We show that the autocorrelation function of the signal recorded by the observer allows it to perceive its environment. More precisely, we consider an observer with constant acceleration (along a Rindler trajectory) and we exploit the recent work on the emergence of the Green's function from the cross correlation of signals transmitted by noise sources. First we recover the result that the signal recorded by the observer has a constant Wigner transform, i.e. a constant local spectrum, when the medium is homogeneous (this is the classical analogue of the Unruh effect). We complete that result by showing that the Rindler trajectory is the only straight-line trajectory that satisfies this property. We also show that, in the presence of an obstacle in the form of an infinite perfect mirror, the Wigner transform is perturbed when the observer comes into the neighborhood of the obstacle. The perturbation makes it possible for the observer to determine its position relative to the obstacle once the entire trajectory has been traversed.
Mots-clés: Correlation-based imaging; Moving sensors; Noise sources; Passive imaging; Rindler trajectory; Unruh effect
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Viral metagenomic analysis of the cheese surface: A comparative study of rapid procedures for extracting viral particles Dugat-Bony, E., J. Lossouarn, M. De Paepe, A. S. Sarthou, Y. Fedala, M. A. Petit, and S. Chaillou Food Microbiology 85 (2020)
Résumé: © 2019 Elsevier Ltd The structure and functioning of microbial communities from fermented foods, including cheese, have been extensively studied during the past decade. However, there is still a lack of information about both the occurrence and the role of viruses in modulating the function of this type of spatially structured and solid ecosystems. Viral metagenomics was recently applied to a wide variety of environmental samples and standardized procedures for recovering viral particles from different type of materials has emerged. In this study, we adapted a procedure originally developed to extract viruses from fecal samples, in order to enable efficient virome analysis of cheese surface. We tested and validated the positive impact of both addition of a filtration step prior to virus concentration and substitution of purification by density gradient ultracentrifugation by a simple chloroform treatment to eliminate membrane vesicles. Viral DNA extracted from the several procedures, as well as a vesicle sample, were sequenced using Illumina paired-end MiSeq technology and the subsequent clusters assembled from the virome were analyzed to assess those belonging to putative phages, plasmid-derived DNA, or even from bacterial chromosomal DNA. The best procedure was then chosen, and used to describe the first cheese surface virome, using Epoisses cheese as example. This study provides the basis of future investigations regarding the ecological importance of viruses in cheese microbial ecosystems.
Mots-clés: Cheese rind; Viral metagenomic; Viral particles extraction procedure
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