Polyadic devil's lenses
Devil's lenses (DLs) were recently proposed as a new kind of kinoform lens in which the phase structure is
characterized by the "devil's staircase" function. DLs are considered fractal lenses because they are constructed
following the geometry of the triadic Cantor set and because they provide self-similar foci along the optical
axis. Here, DLs are generalized allowing the inclusion of polyadic Cantor distributions in their design. The
lacunarity of the selected polyadic fractal distribution is an additional design parameter. The results are coined
polyadic DLs. Construction requirements and interrelations among the different parameters of these new fractal
lenses are also presented. It is shown that the lacunarity parameter affects drastically the irradiance profile
along the optical axis, appodizing higher-order foci, and these features are proved to improve the behavior of
conventional DLs under polychromatic illumination.