A mantis shrimp’s extraordinary eyes
DOI: 10.1063/PT.4.0798
Photonic devices that can detect and control the polarization of light across a range of wavelengths are rare. More common are materials such as quartz that can be made into monochromatic optical retarders, which through their intrinsic birefringence convert a specific wavelength of linearly polarized light into circularly polarized light, or vice versa. Some multilayered thin films exhibit achromatic retardation through fabricated periodic nanoscale structures that effectively combine the dispersive properties of each layer to achieve wavelength-independent birefringence. But engineering nanoscale structures is tricky, and even the best synthetic achromatic retarders perform poorly across the full visible range, varying by as much as 9.1°. But Nature has already solved the puzzle in animals that have evolved biophotonic structures for signaling, vision, and coloration (see PHYSICS TODAY, January 2004, page 18). Now, an international team of researchers from the UK