Jinghan Dong, Weijie Nie, Arthur C. Cardoso, Haichen Zhou, Jingrui Zhang, John G. Rarity, Alex S. Clark
Nonlinear interferometry has widespread applications in sensing, spectroscopy, and imaging. However, most implementations require highly reflective mirrors and precise optical alignment, drastically reducing their versatility and usability in outdoor applications. This work is based on stimulated parametric downconversion, demonstrating methane absorption spectroscopy in the mid-infrared (MIR) region by detecting near-infrared photons using a silicon-based CMOS camera. The MIR light, used to probe methane, is diffusely backscattered from a Lambertian surface, experiencing significant transmission loss. We implement a single-mode confocal illumination and collection scheme, using a two-lens system to mode-match the interfering beams to achieve background methane detection at a distance of 4.6 m under a 57 dB loss. Our method is also extended to real-world surfaces, such as glass, brushed metal, and a leaf, showing robust background methane sensing with various target materials.
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