Simulation result of light affecting liquid geometry. (IMAGE)
Caption
Simulation result of light affecting liquid geometry, which in turn affects reflection and transmission properties of the optical mode, thus constituting a two-way light–liquid interaction mechanism. The degree of deformation serves as an optical memory allowing to store the power magnitude of the previous optical pulse and use fluid dynamics to affect the subsequent optical pulse at the same actuation region, thus constituting an architecture where memory is part of the computation process.
Credit
Gao et al., doi 10.1117/1.AP.4.4.046005
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