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2011, Optical Fibers and Their Applications 2011
Optical Fibers and Their Applications 2014, 2014
Proceedings of SPIE, 2015
Ryszard Romaniuk, Jan Dorosz, Tomasz Woliński (edit.), Optical Fibers and Their Applications 2008, Proc.SPIE 7120, 2008
During the days of 30 January to 02 February 2008 there was held the Eleventh Conference on Optical Fibers and Their Applications. The Conference was opened at the Electrical Engineering Faculty of Białystok University of Technology and was continued in Białowieża, the Capital of the biggest European Primeval Forest National Park. The conferences of this series have been organized since 1976 from the beginning in the Jabłonna Village Palace near Warsaw, and then ever other year conversely in Białowieża (by Białystok University of Technology, Prof. Jan Dorosz, with emphasis on applications, especially non-telecom ones) and in Krasnobród (by UMCS Lublin, Dr. Jan Wójcik, Prof. J. Rayss, with emphasis on technology and telecom applications). The first conference in Białowieża that focused on non-telecommunication application of optical fibers was held in 1982. During this period the conferences in Lublin and then Krasnobród were more focused on technology and metrology of optical fibers supplementing the application and construction topics covered in Białowieża. The conference series on Optical Fibers and Their Applications has been organized in this country for more than 30 years. It was initiated by the late Professors: J. Groszkowski, A. Smoliński, A. Waksmundzki, M. Pluta, and B. Paszkowski. The conferences always gathered the entire national group of optical fiber, as well as optoelectronics experts and a large number of international guests. The Eleventh Conference was opened by Prof. W. Woliński in the presence of the Rector of Białystok University of Technology. The national expertise in optical fibers has gathered during the recent years at several big organizations, some of them with international roots: Section of Optoelectronics, Committee of Electronics and Telecommunications, Polish Academy of Sciences; Polish Committee of Optoelectronics, Association of Polish Electrical Engineers; Polish Chapter of SPIE. The Latter organization registered in this country as a Society was transformed in 2008 to the Photonics Society of Poland. These organizations cooperate with IEEE Poland Section and LEOS Chapter, Section of Optics by Polish Physical Society and Polish Ceramic Society. During the conference opening ceremony, Prof. J. Dorosz reminded everybody about the history of Białowieża Conferences. The national experts of guided wave, laser, and semiconductor optoelectronics meeting in Krasnobród, Białowieża, and Świnoujście (Laser Technology Symposium) managed to integrate their activities into the framework of numerable optoelectronics research programs carried out during these years. Realization of these programs led to numerable scientific and technical achievements. These programs also became the impetus for establishing a number of photonic firms in this country. During the recent period, however the dynamics of spin-off establishment has been much lower, which is a subject of concern for these bodies. This decrease is combined with confined money flow to this sector of economy. The Białowieża Conference gathered over 120 participants, with nearly 80 papers in oral and poster sessions. The biggest groups of papers originated from such university centers active in optoelectronics as: Silesian University of Technology in Gliwice, Białystok, Warsaw and Lublin, as well as UMCS in Lublin. The topical coverage of the Symposium was: materials for optoelectronics – in particular materials for optical fiber technology, fabrication of optical fibers, components and sub-assemblies for optoelectronics, metrology of optical fibers, metrology of optoelectronic components and devices, applications of optical fibers, and education in optoelectronics and photonics. The technological sessions of the Symposium presented the works from three main national centers where optical fibers are pulled. These are Faculty of Chemistry, University of Maria Curie Skłodowska in Lublin, Faculty of Electrical Engineering at Białystok University of Technology, and Institute of Electronic Materials Technology in Warsaw. A number of research centers in this country and internationally use these optical fibers for optical fiber sensors and photonic instrumentation devices. A large group of applications concerned optical fibers filled or impregnated with liquid crystals, which are highly nonlinear optical substances, much more nonlinear than glasses. This group of papers originated from the laboratory of Prof. T. Wolinski and Prof. A. Domański of Warsaw University of Technology. Some of these papers were prepared in cooperation with research groups in Brussels and Canada. The Symposium organizers have provided very favorable participation conditions for Ph.D. and M.Sc. students, who participated in the Symposium in a large number. The majority of the papers were presented by young researchers, which supports the belief that this branch of technology is vital and promising for future development.
Introduction Optical Fibers and Their Applications, Białystok-Białowieża 2011 The Optical Fibers and Their Applications series of conferences are a kind of a forum of national science in this branch of photonics. The conference is organized every year and a half by major optical fiber technology and application centers located in Białystok - at Białystok University of Technology; in Lublin at Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, and the Technical University of Lublin. The conference belongs to a bigger circle of national conferences on optoelectronics, optics, photonics, sensors, and laser technology which are under a general patronage of professional community organizations such as the Polish Ceramic Society, the Photonics Society of Poland, the Polish Optoelectronics Committee, and the Section of Optoelectronics in the Committee of Electronics and Telecommunications. The XIII Conference on Optical Fibers and Their Applications was held 26–29 January 2011, and opened at the Electrical Engineering Faculty of Białystok University of Technology. The conference continued in Białowieża, the capital of the largest European Primeval Forest National Park. The conferences of this series have been organized since 1976 from the beginning in the Jabłonna Village Palace near Warsaw, and then every other year conversely in Białowieża (by Białystok University of Technology, Prof. Jan Dorosz, with emphasis on applications, especially non-telecom ones) and in Krasnobród (by UMCS Lublin, Dr. Jan Wójcik, Prof. J. Rayss, with emphasis on technology and telecom applications). The first conference in Białowieża that focused on nontelecommunication application of optical fibers was held in 1982. During this period the conferences in Lublin and then Krasnobród were more focused on technology and metrology of optical fibers supplementing the application and construction topics covered in Białowieża. The Optical Fibers and Their Applications conference series has been organized in this country for more than 30 years. It was initiated by the late Professors J. Groszkowski, A. Smoliński, A. Waksmundzki, M. Pluta, and B. Paszkowski. The conferences have always gathered the entire national group of optical fiber, as well as optoelectronics experts and a large number of international guests. The XIII Conference was opened by Prof. W. Woliński in the presence of the Rector of Białystok University of Technology. The national expertise in optical fibers was gathered during the recent years around several big organizations, some of them with international roots: Section of Optoelectronics, Committee of Electronics and Telecommunications, Polish Academy of Sciences; Polish Committee of Optoelectronics, Association of Polish Electrical Engineers; the former Polish Chapter of SPIE. (The latter organization registered in this country as a society was transformed in 2008 to the Photonics Society of Poland.) These organizations cooperate with IEEE Poland Section and LEOS Chapter, Section of Optics by Polish Physical Society, and Polish Ceramic Society. ix Downloaded From: http://proceedings.spiedigitallibrary.org/ on 12/18/2016 Terms of Use: http://spiedigitallibrary.org/ss/termsofuse.aspx During the conference’s opening ceremony, Prof. J. Dorosz reminded everyone about the history of the Białowieża conferences. The national experts of guided wave, laser, and semiconductor optoelectronics meeting in Krasnobród, Białowieża, and Świnoujście (Laser Technology Symposium) managed to integrate their activities in the frame of numerable optoelectronics research programs carried out during these years. These were programs: national, central, departmental, priority, university, and recently also European realized with a number of international partners. The realizations of these programs led to numerable scientific and technical achievements, and were underlying factors for establishing a number of photonic firms in this country. The XIII Conference gathered over 80 participants, with over 60 papers in oral and poster sessions. The biggest groups of papers originated from such university centers active in optoelectronics as: Silesian University of Technology in Gliwice, Białystok, Warsaw and Lublin, as well as UMCS in Lublin. The conference’s topics covered were: materials for optoelectronics – in particular materials for optical fiber technology, fabrication of optical fibers, components and sub-assemblies for optoelectronics, metrology of optical fibers, metrology of optoelectronic components and devices, applications of optical fibers, and education in optoelectronics and photonics. The plenary papers that were presented touched on current problems in optoelectronics. The technological sessions of the conference presented the works from three main national centers where optical fibers are pulled. These are Faculty of Chemistry, University of Maria Curie Skłodowska in Lublin; Faculty of Electrical Engineering at Białystok University of Technology, and Institute of Electronic Materials Technology in Warsaw. A number of research centers, both in this country and international, use these optical fibers for optical fiber sensors and photonic instrumentation devices. A large group of applications concerned optical fibers filled or impregnated with liquid crystals, which are highly nonlinear optical substances, much more nonlinear than glasses. This group of papers originated from the laboratories at Warsaw and Wrocław Universities of Technology. The conference organizers provided very favorable participation conditions for Ph.D. and M.Sc. students, who participated in the symposium in a large number. The majority of the papers were presented by young researchers, which supports the belief that this branch of technology is vital and promising for future development. The Editors would like to thank Dr. Maciej Zajkowski from Białystok University of Technology for his devoted help as a Chair of the Organization Committee of the XIII Conference on Optical Fibers and Their Applications. Jan Dorosz Ryszard S. Romaniuk
The Optical Fibers and Their Applications symposia is a forum for national science in this branch of photonics. It is organized every year and a half by two major optical fiber technology and application centers located in Białystok at Białystok University of Technology, and in Lublin at Maria Curie-Skłodowska University and Technical University of Lublin. The conference belongs to a bigger circle of national conferences on optoelectronics, optics, photonics, sensors, and laser technology which are under a general patronage of professional community organizations like Polish Ceramic Society, Photonics Society of Poland, Polish Optoelectronics Committee, and Section of Optoelectronics in the Committee of Electronics and Telecommunications of Polish Academy of Science. The 15th iteration of this symposia, Optical Fibers and Their Applications 2014, was held between January 29 and February 1. The conference opened at the Electrical Engineering Faculty of Białystok University of Technology and was continued in Lipowy Most–located in the heart of Knyszyńska Primeval Forest National Park. The conference began in 1976 the Jabłonna Village Palace near Warsaw, and then it continued in a two-year cycle taking place in Białowieża and now in Lipowy Most, recently (chaired by Białystok University of Technology, Prof. Jan Dorosz, emphasis on applications, especially of non-telecom ones), in Krasnobród, and now in Nałęczów (by UMCS Lublin, the late Dr. Jan Wójcik and Prof. J. Rayss, now by Dr. P. Mergo, and Lublin University of Technology, emphasis on technology and telecom applications). The first conference in Białowieża focused on non-telecommunication application of optical fibers was held in 1982. During this period the conferences in Lublin and then Krasnobród were more focused on technology and metrology of optical fibers: supplementing the application and construction topics moved in Białowieża. The conference series on Optical Fibers and Their Applications has been organized in this country for nearly 40 years now. It was initiated by the late professors: J. Groszkowski, A. Smoliński, A. Waksmundzki, M. Pluta, B. Paszkowski, and Z. Szpigler. The conference always gathers the national optical fiber and optoelectronics experts, a large number of students, and international guests. The conference was opened by Prof. R. S. Romaniuk at the Pro-Rector for Science of Białystok University of Technology along with Prof. Jan Dorosz. The national expertise in optical fibers gathered during the recent years around several big organizations, some of them with international roots: Section of Optoelectronics, Committee of Electronics and Telecommunications, Polish Academy of Sciences; Polish Committee of Optoelectronics, Association of Polish Electrical Engineers; and the Polish Chapter of SPIE. The Polish Chapter of SPIE transformed in 2008 when it registered as the Photonics Society of Poland. These organizations cooperate with IEEE Poland Section and IEEE Photonics Society Chapter, Section of Optics by Polish Physical Society, and the Polish Ceramic Society. This year’s opening ceremony shared the Białystok Optical Fiber Conference history. The national experts of guided wave, laser and semiconductor optoelectronics meeting in Krasnobród, Białowieża, Świnoujście (Laser Technology Symposium) and WILGA (Photonics Applications) integrated their activities in the frame of numerous optoelectronics research programs carried out including national, central, departmental, priority, university, and the recent addition of European and other international partners. Realizing these programs lead to numerous scientific and technical achievements, and contributed to a number of the photonics firm establishments in this country. The Białystok and Lipowy Most conference gathered around 120 participants. Ninety papers in oral and poster sessions were presented. The biggest groups of papers originated from such optoelectronic university centers as WAT University in Warsaw, Silesian University of Technology in Gliwice, Białystok, Warsaw and Lublin, as well as UMCS in Lublin. The topics covered at the symposium included materials for optoelectronics—in particular active materials for optical fiber technology, fabrication of optical fibers—photonic fibers, components and subassemblies for optoelectronics, metrology of optical fibers, metrology of optoelectronic components and devices, applications of optical fibers, education in optoelectronics and photonics. Plenary paper presentations also touched on some current problems in optoelectronics. The technical sessions included work from the three main national centers where optical fibers are pulled: the Faculty of Electrical Engineering at Białystok University of Technology; the Faculty of Chemistry, University of Maria Curie Skłodowska in Lublin; and the Institute of Electronic Materials Technology in Warsaw. A number of research centers in this country and internationally use these optical fibers for optical fiber sensors and photonic instrumentation devices. A large group of applications concerned optical fibers filled or impregnated with liquid crystals, which are highly nonlinear optical substances—much more nonlinear than glasses. This group of papers originated form the laboratories at Warsaw and Wrocław Universities of Technology. The organizers provided many active-participation opportunities for Ph.D. and M.Sc. students, and they did in significant numbers. The majority of the papers were presented by young researchers, which supports the belief that this branch of technology is vivid and promises for the future development. The Editors would like to thank all authors of papers published in this volume and presented during the 2014 conference on Optical Fibers and Their Applications.
The symposium Optical Fibers and Their Applications 2015 is a forum of national science in this branch of photonics. The symposium hosts a number of guests from this geographical region, and especially from Ukraine, Belarus, and Kazakhstan. It is organized every year and a half by two major optical fiber technology and application centers located in Białystok at Białystok University of Technology and in Lublin at Maria Curie-Skłodowska University and Technical University of Lublin. The conference belongs to a bigger circle of national conferences on optoelectronics, optics, photonics, sensors and laser technology which are under a general patronage of professional community organizations such as Polish Ceramic Society, Photonics Society of Poland, Polish Optoelectronics Committee of the Association of Polish Electrical Engineers, and the Section of Optoelectronics in the Committee of Electronics and Telecommunications, Polish Academy of Sciences. On 22 –25 September 2015, the sixteenth conference on “Optical Fibers and Their Applications” was held at the Energetyk Resort in Nałęczów, near Lublin. The accompanying school/workshop on Optical Fiber Technology was held in Lublin at UMCS OFT Laboratory on 21 September. These conferences have been organized since 1976 in the Jabłonna Village Palace near Warsaw and then in a two year cycle in Białowieża, now in Lipowy Most (by Białystok University of Technology, Professor Jan Dorosz, with emphasis on applications, especially nontelecom ones) and in Krasnobród, now in Nałęczów (by UMCS Lublin, the late Doctor Jan Wójcik, Professor J. Rayss, now Doctor W. Podkościelny and Doctor P. Mergo, and Lublin University of Technology, Professor W. Wójcik, with emphasis on technology and telecom applications). The first conference in Białowieża, focused on non-telecommunication application of optical fibers and was held in 1982. During this period, the conferences in Lublin and then Krasnobród, now in Nałęczów, were more focused on technology and metrology of optical fibers supplementing the application and construction topics covered in Białowieża. The conference series on Optical Fibers and Their Applications has been organized in this country for 40 years. It was initiated by the late professors: J. Groszkowski, A. Smoliński, A. Waksmundzki, M. Pluta, B. Paszkowski, Z. Szpigler, J. Wójcik, K. Holejko, J. Rayss, S. Sońta. Forty years ago, optical fiber technology began in Poland. This anniversary was celebrated at the conference with a memorial jubilee session. The conferences always gathered a national group of optical fiber and optoelectronics experts and a large number of students and some international guests. The sixteenth conference was opened by Professor W. Wójcik in the presence of the Rector of UMCS University and the Dean of the Faculty of Chemistry of UMCS. National expertise in optical fibers was centered in recent years around several big organizations, some of them with international roots: Section of xv Proc. of SPIE Vol. 9816 981601-15 Downloaded From: http://proceedings.spiedigitallibrary.org/ on 12/18/2015 Terms of Use: http://spiedigitallibrary.org/ss/TermsOfUse.aspx Optoelectronics, Committee of Electronics and Telecommunications, Polish Academy of Sciences; Polish Committee of Optoelectronics, Association of Polish Electrical Engineers; and the Polish Chapter of SPIE – The International Society for Optics and Photonics. The latter organization was transformed in 2008 to the Photonics Society of Poland. These organizations cooperate with SPIE, IEEE Poland Section and Photonics Chapter, Section of Optics by Polish Physical Society, and the Polish Ceramic Society. During the conference’s opening ceremony Professor W. Wójcik related to everyone the history of OFTA Nałęczów conferences. The national experts of guided wave, laser, and semiconductor optoelectronics meetings in Krasnobród, Nałęczów, Białowieża, Lipowy Most, and Świnoujście (Laser Technology Symposium) managed to integrate their activities into the framework of numerable optoelectronics research programs carried out during these years. These were programs: national, central, departmental, priority, university, and recently also European that were realized through a number of international partnerships. Realization of these projects led to numerable scientific and technical achievements as well as they were underlying factors for establishing a number of photonic firms in this country and modernizing the teaching at technical universities. The 2015 Nałęczów conference gathered around 120 participants. More than 80 papers were presented in oral and poster sessions. The largest group of papers originated from such university centers active in optoelectronics as: Silesian University of Technology in Gliwice, Białystok, Warsaw and Lublin as well as UMCS in Lublin. The topical coverage of the symposium included: materials for optoelectronics – in particular materials for optical fiber technology, fabrication of optical fibers, components and sub-assemblies for optoelectronics, metrology of optical fibers, metrology of optoelectronic components and devices, applications of optical fibers, education in optoelectronics and photonics. A few plenary papers were presented that touched on very current and hot problems in optoelectronics. The technological sessions of the symposium presented the works from three main national centers where optical fibers are pulled: the Faculty of Chemistry, University of Maria Curie Skłodowska in Lublin, the Faculty of Electrical Engineering at Białystok University of Technology, and the Institute of Electronic Materials Technology in Warsaw. A number of research centers in this country and internationally use these optical fibers for optical fiber sensors and photonic instrumentation devices. A large group of applications concern microstructural photonic optical fibers filled or impregnated with liquid crystals, which are highly nonlinear optical substances, much more nonlinear than glasses. This group of papers originated from the laboratories at Warsaw and Wrocław Universities of Technology. The fibers were manufactured at UMCS in Lublin and at ITME in Warsaw. There were also numerable application-oriented contributions from photonics innovative firms. The symposium organizers have provided very favorable participation conditions for Ph.D. and M.Sc. students. As a result, they participated in the symposium in large numbers. The majority of the papers were presented by young researchers which supports the belief that this branch of technology is vivid and promising for future development. The Editors would like to thank Doctor Andrzej Smolarz from Lublin University of Technology for his devoted help as a technical editor of this volume of proceedings from the sixteenth conference on Optical Fibers and Their Applications, Nałęczów, 2015.
Symposium Optical Fibers and Their Application is a kind of a forum of national science in this branch of Photonics. The Symposium usually hosts many guests from this geographical region, especially from Ukraine and Belarus. It is organized every year and a half by two major optical fiber technology and application centers located in Białystok at Białystok University of Technology and in Lublin at Maria Curie-Skłodowska University and Technical University of Lublin. The conference belongs to a bigger circle of national conferences on optoelectronics, optics, photonics, sensors and laser technology which are under a general patronage of professional community organizations like the Polish Ceramic Society, Photonics Society of Poland, Polish Optoelectronics Committee of the Association of Polish Electrical Engineers, and Section of Optoelectronics in the Committee of Electronics and Telecommunications, and the Polish Academy of Sciences. During the days of 09 to 12 October 2012 the XIV Conference on Optical Fibers and Their Applications was held. The Conference was opened at the Energetyk Resort in Nałęczów, near Lublin, and the accompanying School/Workshop on Optical Fiber Technology was held in Lublin at UMCS OFT Laboratory. The conference series has been organized since 1976, from the beginning in the Jabłonna Village Palace near Warsaw, and then in two years cycle conversely in Białowieża by the Białystok University of Technology (Prof. Jan Dorosz, with emphasis on applications, especially non-telecom ones) and in Krasnobród –now in Nałęczów by UMCS Lublin (the late Dr Jan Wójcik, Prof. J. Rayss, now Dr. W. Podkościelny and Dr P. Mergo) and Lublin University of Technology (Prof. W. Wójcik, with emphasis on technology and telecom applications). The first conference in Białowieża focused on non-telecommunication application of optical fibers was held in 1982. During this period the conferences in Lublin and then Krasnobród – now in Nałęczów were more focused on technology and metrology of optical fibers supplementing the application and construction topics moved in Białowieża. The conference series on Optical Fibers and Their Applications has been organized in this country for more than 30 years. It was initiated by the late professors: J. Groszkowski, A. Smoliński, A. Waksmundzki, M. Pluta, B. Paszkowski, Z. Szpigler. These conferences mostly gather the whole country’s researchers and optical fiber and optoelectronics experts as well as a large number of students and international guests. The XIV Conference was opened by Prof W. Wójcik at the Pro-Rector of Lublin University of Technology and Dean of the Faculty of Chemistry of UMCS. The national expertise in optical fibers was gathered during the recent years around several big organizations, some of them with international roots: Section of Optoelectronics, Committee of Electronics and Telecommunications, Polish Academy of Sciences; Polish Committee of Optoelectronics, Association of Polish Electrical Engineers; the Polish Chapter of SPIE – The International Society for Optical Engineering. The Latter organization registered in this country as a Society was transformed in 2008 to the Photonics Society of Poland. These organizations cooperate with SPIE, IEEE Poland Section and Photonics Chapter, Section of Optics by Polish Physical Society and Polish Ceramic Society. During the conference opening ceremony Prof. W. Wójcik reminisced about the past contributors and participants of the Lublin – Krasnobród (now Nałęczów) Conferences. The national experts of guided wave, laser and semiconductor optoelectronics meeting in Krasnobród, Nałęczów, Białowieża and Świnoujście (Laser Technology Symposia) managed to integrate their activities in the frame of many optoelectronics research programs carried out during these years. These were programs were realized with partners national, central, departmental, priority, university and recently from Europe. Continuing work on these projects lead to numerous scientific and technical achievements as well, and were a major factor in building many photonic firms in this country and modernizing the teaching at technical universities. The Nałęczów Conference gathered around 100 participants. Over 60 papers in oral and poster sessions were presented. Most papers originated from university centers active in optoelectronics such as: Silesian University of Technology in Gliwice, Białystok, Warsaw and Lublin as well as UMCS in Lublin. The topical coverage of the meeting was materials for optoelectronics: in particular materials for optical fiber technology, fabrication of optical fibers, components and subassemblies for optoelectronics, metrology of optical fibers, metrology of optoelectronic components and devices, applications of optical fibers, and education in optoelectronics and photonics. A few plenary papers presented touched on very current and hot problems in optoelectronics. The technological sessions of the Symposium presented the works from three main national centers where optical fibers are pulled. These are Faculty of Chemistry, University of Maria Curie Skłodowska in Lublin, Faculty of Electrical Engineering at Białystok University of Technology and Institute of Electronic Materials Technology in Warsaw. A number of research centers in this country and internationally use these optical fibers for optical fiber sensors and photonic instrumentation devices. A large group of applications concerned microstructural photonic optical fibers filled or impregnated with liquid crystals, which are highly nonlinear optical substances, much more nonlinear than glasses. This group of papers originated from the laboratories at Warsaw and Wrocław Universities of Technology but the fibers were manufactured at UMCS in Lublin and at ITME in Warsaw. The Symposium organizers have provided very favorable participation conditions for Ph.D. and M.Sc. students; who were significant participators in the symposium. The majority of the papers were presented by young researchers which supports the belief that this branch of technology is vivid and promises future development. The Editors would like to thank Dr. Andrzej Smolarz from Lublin University of Technology for his devoted help as a Technical Editor of this volume of Proceedings from the XIVth Conference on Optical Fibers and Their Applications, Nałęczów 2012. References 1. W.L.Woliński, Z.Jankiewicz, R.S.Romaniuk, Laser Technology 2012: Progress in Lasers, Proc. SPIE 8703 2. W.L.Woliński, Z.Jankiewicz, R.S.Romaniuk, Laser Technology 2012: Application of in Lasers, Proc. SPIE 8704 3. R.S.Romaniuk, Photonics Applications in Astronomy, Communications, Industry, and High-Energy Physics Experiments 2012, Proc. SPIE 8454 4. J.Dorosz, R.S.Romaniuk (Editors) ,Optical Fibers and Their Applications 2011, Proc. SPIE 8010 5. J.Dorosz, R.S.Romaniuk, T.R.Woliński (Editors), Optical Fibers and Their Applications 2008, Proc. SPIE 7120 6. J.Dorosz, R.S.Romaniuk (Editors), Optical Fibers and Their Applications 2003, Proc. SPIE 5028 7. J.Dorosz, R.S.Romaniuk (Editors), Optical Fibers and Their Applications 1999, Proc. SPIE 3731 8. M.Szustakowski, R.S.Romaniuk, Optical Fibers and Their Applications 1989, Proc. SPIE 1085 9. M.Szustakowski, R.S.Romaniuk, Optical Fibers and Their Applications 1986, Proc. SPIE 0670 10. W.Wójcik, R.S.Romaniuk, Optical Fibers and Applications, International Journal of Electronics and Telecommunications, vol.59, no.1, in press (2013) Ryszard S. Romaniuk Waldemar Wójcik
Proceedings of SPIE 11456, 2020
Symposium on “Optical Fibers and Their Application” OFTA is a forum of national science in this branch of Photonics. The Symposium also hosts numerable guests from this geographical region, and especially from neighboring countries and Europe. It is organized every year and a half by two major optical fiber technology and application development centers located in Białystok at Białystok University of Technology, and in Lublin at Maria Curie-Skłodowska University UMCS and the Technical University of Lublin. The conference belongs to a bigger circle of national meetings on optoelectronics, optics, photonics, sensors and laser technology which are under a general patronage of professoressional community organizations like the Polish Physical Society – Section of Optics, the Polish Ceramic Society, the Photonics Society of Poland, Polish Optoelectronics Committee of the Association of Polish Electrical Engineers, Section of Photonics in the Committee of Electronics and Telecommunications, Polish Academy of Sciences, and Polish Association of Theoretical and Applied Electrical Engineering.
Proceedings of SPIE 11045, 2019
The Optical Fibers and Their Applications 2018 conference is a forum of national science in this branch of Photonics. The conference usually hosts numerable guests from this geographic region, especially from Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan. It is organized every year and a half by two major optical fiber technology and application centers located in Białystok at Białystok University of Technology, and in Lublin, at Maria Curie-Skłodowska University and Technical University of Lublin. The conference belongs to a bigger circle of national conferences on optoelectronics, optics, photonics, sensors and laser technology, which are under the general patronage of professional community organizations like the Polish Ceramic Society, Photonics Society of Poland, Polish Optoelectronics Committee of the Association of Polish Electrical Engineers, and the Section of Optoelectronics in the Committee of Electronics and Telecommunications, Polish Academy of Sciences.
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