Person:
López Alonso, José Manuel

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First Name
José Manuel
Last Name
López Alonso
Affiliation
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Faculty / Institute
Óptica y Optometría
Department
Óptica
Area
Optica
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UCM identifierORCIDScopus Author IDWeb of Science ResearcherIDDialnet IDGoogle Scholar ID

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 16
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    Multivariate analysis of photonic crystal microcavities with fabrication defects
    (Photonic Materials, Devices, and Applications, Pts 1 and 2, 2005) Rico García, José María; López Alonso, José Manuel; Alda Serrano, Javier
    Photonic crystal microcavities are defined by the spatial arrangement of materials. In the analysis of their spatial temporal mode distributions Finite-Difference Time-Domain (FDTD) methods have proved its validity. The output of the FDTD can be seen as the realizations of a multidimensional statistic variable. At the same time, fabrication tolerances induce an added and unavoidable variability in the performance of the microcavity. In this contribution we have analyzed the modes of a defective photonic crystal microcavity. The location, size, and shape of the cylinders configuring the microcavity are modelled as having a normal distribution of their parametric descriptors. A principal component analysis is applied to the output of the FDTD for a population of defective microcavities. The relative importance of the defects is evaluated, along with the changes induced in the spatial temporal distribution of electromagnetic field obtained from the calculation.
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    Characterization of spatial–temporal patterns in dynamic speckle sequences using principal component analysis
    (Optical Engineering, 2016) López Alonso, José Manuel; Grumel, Eduardo; Cap, Nelly Lucía; Trivi, Marcelo; Rabal, Héctor; Alda Serrano, Javier
    Abstract. Speckle is being used as a characterization tool for the analysis of the dynamics of slow-varying phenomena occurring in biological and industrial samples at the surface or near-surface regions. The retrieved data take the form of a sequence of speckle images. These images contain information about the inner dynamics of the biological or physical process taking place in the sample. Principal component analysis (PCA) is able to split the original data set into a collection of classes. These classes are related to processes showing different dynamics. In addition, statistical descriptors of speckle images are used to retrieve information on the characteristics of the sample. These statistical descriptors can be calculated in almost real time and provide a fast monitoring of the sample. On the other hand, PCA requires a longer computation time, but the results contain more information related to spatial–temporal patterns associated to the process under analysis. This contribution merges both descriptions and uses PCA as a preprocessing tool to obtain a collection of filtered images, where statistical descriptors are evaluated on each of them. The method applies to slow-varying biological and industrial processes.
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    Project number: 97
    Generación de materiales y recursos para la implantación del Plan de Lenguas para la Internacionalización PLI en la Facultad de Óptica y Optometría
    (2016) Sánchez Pérez, María Isabel; Alda Serrano, Javier; Carreño Sánchez, Fernando; Cabrero Granado, Eduardo; Peces Peña, María Dolores; Garrido Mercado, Rafaela; Puell Marín, María Cinta; Martín Pérez, Yolanda; López Alonso, José Manuel; Gómez Calderón, Óscar; Melle Hernández, Sonia; Movilla Serrano, Jesús María
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    Characterization of FDTD artifacts and modes in photonic crystals
    (Proceedings of SPIE, 2004) López Alonso, José Manuel; Rico García, José María; Alda Serrano, Javier
    FDTD algorithms are being used as a numeric tool for the analysis of photonic crystals. The definition of the modes associated with them is of interest for the study of the capabilities of photonic crystal devices. The Principal Component Analysis (PCA) has been applied here to a sequence of images corresponding to the electromagnetic fields obtained from the FDTD simulations. PCA has revealed and quantified the importance of the modes appearing in the photonic crystals. The capability of PCA to produce spatial structures, or maps, associated with temporal evolutions has made possible the calculation of the modulus and phase of the modes existing in the photonic crystal. Some other modes, contributing with an almost negligible amount to the total variance of the original data, are also revealed by the method. Besides, PCA has been used to quantify the contribution of the numerical noise of the algorithm and to identify the effect of artifacts related with the matching of the computational grid and the inner geometry of the photonic crystal.
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    Antenas ópticas y detectores de luz
    (Ver y Oír, 2005) Alda Serrano, Javier; López Alonso, José Manuel; Boreman, Glenn; Rico García, José María
    La investigación sobre el comportamiento de estructuras metálicas cuyo tamaño es comparable a la longitud de onda de la radiación detectada puede realizarse considerándolas como antenas detectoras de radiación óptica. El diseño, análisis y caracterización de estos dispositivos requiere el estudio de los fenómenos básicos de interacción entre la radiación y la materia. A la vez, su inclusión en sistemas con relevancia tecnológica requiere la medida y caracterización de sus propiedades. Nuestro equipo de investigación, integrado en el «Grupo Complutense de Óptica Aplicada», se ha dedicado durante los últimos años al estudio de estos dispositivos así como a la caracterización de todo tipo de detectores de luz, y a la definición de aquellas figuras de mérito que son relevantes a la hora de establecer su uso.
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    Principal Component Analysis of Results Obtained from Finite-Difference Time-Domain Algorithms
    (Egyptian Journal of Solids, 2006) López Alonso, José Manuel; Rico García, José María; Alda Serrano, Javier
    Finite-Differences Time-Domain (FDTD) algorithms are well established tools of computational electromagnetism. Because of their practical implementation as computer codes, they are affected by many numerical artefact and noise. In order to obtain better results we propose using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) based on multivariate statistical techniques. The PCA has been successfully used for the analysis of noise and spatial temporal structure in a sequence of images. It allows a straightforward discrimination between the numerical noise and the actual electromagnetic variables, and the quantitative estimation of their respective contributions. Besides, The GDTD results can be filtered to clean the effect of the noise. In this contribution we will show how the method can be applied to several FDTD simulations: the propagation of a pulse in vacuum, the analysis of two-dimensional photonic crystals. In this last case, PCA has revealed hidden electromagnetic structures related to actual modes of the photonic crystal.
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    FDTD analysis of nano-antenna structures with dispersive materials at optical frequencies
    (Nanotechnology II. Proceedings of the Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers, 2005) Rico García, José María; López Alonso, José Manuel; Alda Serrano, Javier
    The Finite-Difference Time Domain method has encountered several difficulties when analyzing dispersive materials. This is the case of the metal structures that configure an optical antenna. These devices couple the electromagnetic radiation to conform currents that are rectified by another physical element attached to the antenna. Both elements: antenna and rectifier configures an optical detector with sub-wavelength dimensions. In this contribution we analyze the effect on the currents induced by the incident electromagnetic field using FDTD and taking into account the dispersive character of metal at optical frequencies. The analysis is done in a 2 dimensional framework and it serves as an analytical tool for the election of material and structures in the fabrication of optical antennas.
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    Micro- and Nano-Antennas for Light Detection
    (Egyptian Journal of Solids, 2005) Alda Serrano, Javier; Rico García, José María; López Alonso, José Manuel; Boreman, Glenn
    Antenna-coupled optical detectors, also named as optical antennas, are being developed as detection devices with micro- and nano-scale features for their use in the millimetre, infrared, and visible spectral range. They are optical components that couple the electromagnetic radiation in the visible and infrared wavelengths in the same way that radioelectric antennas do at the corresponding wavelengths. Optical antennas show polarization dependence, tuneability, and rapid time of response. They also can be considered as point detectors and directionally sensitive elements. So far, these detectors have been operated in the mid-infrared with positive results in the visible. The measurement and characterization of optical antennas requires the use of an experimental set-up with nanometric resolution. On the other hand, a computational simulation of the interaction between the material structures and the incoming electromagnetic radiation is needed to explore alternative designs of practical devices. In this contribution we will present the concept of optical and infrared antennas, and some experimental results of their performance, along with the experimental set-up arranged for their characterization in the visible
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    Finite-difference time-domain simulation of low-F# Fresnel zone plates coupled to IR antennas
    (Proceedings of SPIE, 2004) Rico García, José María; López Alonso, José Manuel; Lail, Brian; Boreman, Glenn; Alda Serrano, Javier
    Fresnel Zone Plate Lenses (FZPLs) have been successfully coupled to infrared (IR) antennas producing a responsivity enhancement of about two orders of magnitude. However, their lateral extension may compromise their applicability in focal-plane-arrays (FPA) IR imagers, where the dimensions of the pixel are constrained by the FPA spacing. When designing optimum-gain FZPLs for FPAs, we are lead to the requirement of FZPLs operating at very low F/#s (marginal rays propagating at a large angle in image space). In this case, Finite-Difference Time-Domain techniques (FDTD) are used to refine the physical-optics modelling results, producing a result closer to the actual case encountered in a high-fill-factor FPA. In this contribution, we analyze the FZPL designs by using FDTD techniques. The main result of the FDTD computation is the gain factor defined as the ratio of the response of the IR antennas coupled with the FZPL, compared to the same antennas without the FZPL.
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    High-resolution spatial-response measurements of optical nano-antennas in the visible
    (IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium, IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium, 2007) Alda Serrano, Javier; Rico García, José María; López Alonso, José Manuel; Boreman, Glenn
    A few years ago, some of the authors of the paper demonstrated the resonance of optical antennas in the visible frequencies. The results of that paper were obtained using experimental techniques that were primarily developed for the measurement of antenna-coupled detectors in the infrared. In the present paper, we show the results of spatial-response mapping obtained by using a dedicated measurement station for the characterization of optical antennas in the visible. At the same time, the bottleneck in the spatial responsivity calculation represented by the beam characterization has been approached from a different perspective. The proposed technique uses a collection of knife edge measurements in order to avoid the use of any model of the laser beam irradiance. By taking all this into account we present the spatial responsivity of optical antennas measured with high spatial resolution in the visible.