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Greg Gbur
Research Interests
- Optics
- Inverse problems (Differential equations)
- Electromagnetic theory
Other Scholars in Department of Physics and Optical Science
Greg Gbur is a Professor of Physics and Optical Science. He received his BA with honors from the University of Chicago and his MA and PhD at the University of Rochester, working under professor Emil Wolf. He has published nearly 100 peer-reviewed papers, and has written three books, Mathematical Methods for Optical Physics and Engineering (2010), Singular Optics (2017), and Falling Felines and Fundamental Physics (fall 2019). He is also the author of a popular science blog, Skulls in the Stars.
Recent Citations for Greg Gbur
- Controlled coherence plasmonic light sources
- Cycle of phase, coherence and polarization singularities in Young's three-pinhole experiment
- Dynamic aerosol and dynamic air-water interface curvature effects on a 2-Gbit/s free-space optical link using orbital-angular-momentum multiplexing
- Extraordinary optical transmission through multi-layered systems of corrugated metallic thin films
- Fractional vortex Hilbert's Hotel
- High order plasmonic vortex generation based on spiral nanoslits
- Massive parallel sorting of particles using unwound polygonal vortex beams
- Partially coherent radially polarized fractional vortex beam
- Propagation of radially polarized Hermite non-uniformly correlated beams in a turbulent atmosphere
- Propagation properties of Hermite non-uniformly correlated beams in turbulence
- Rectangular Hermite non-uniformly correlated beams and its propagation properties
- Scintillation properties of a partially coherent vector beam with vortex phase in turbulent atmosphere
- Second- order statistical properties of conjugate mode double-H partially coherent beams in turbulence
- Simulating fields of arbitrary spatial and temporal coherence
- Singularities of partially polarized vortex beams
- Spiral spectrum of a Laguerre-Gaussian beam propagating in anisotropic non-Kolmogorov turbulent atmosphere along horizontal path
- Strategies for employing surface plasmons in near-field optical readout systems
- The evolution of spectral intensity and orbital angular momentum of twisted Hermite Gaussian Schell model beams in turbulence
- Using superoscillations for superresolved imaging and subwavelength focusing
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