995 research outputs found
Spatial dispersion and energy in strong chiral medium
Since the discovery of backward-wave materials, people have tried to realize
strong chiral medium, which is traditionally thought impossible mainly for the
reason of energy and spatial dispersion. We compare the two most popular
descriptions of chiral medium. After analyzing several possible reasons for the
traditional restriction, we show that strong chirality parameter leads to
positive energy without any frequency-band limitation in the weak spatial
dispersion. Moreover, strong chirality does not result in a strong spatial
dispersion, which occurs only around the traditional limit point. For strong
spatial dispersion where higher-order terms of spatial dispersion need to be
considered, the energy conversation is also valid. Finally, we show that strong
chirality need to be realized from the conjugated type of spatial dispersion.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Illusion Media: Generating Virtual Objects Using Realizable Metamaterials
We propose a class of optical transformation media, illusion media, which
render the enclosed object invisible and generate one or more virtual objects
as desired. We apply the proposed media to design a microwave device, which
transforms an actual object into two virtual objects. Such an illusion device
exhibits unusual electromagnetic behavior as verified by full-wave simulations.
Different from the published illusion devices which are composed of left-handed
materials with simultaneously negative permittivity and permeability, the
proposed illusion media have finite and positive permittivity and permeability.
Hence the designed device could be realizable using artificial metamaterials.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, published in Appl. Phys. Lett
Super-resolution image transfer by a vortex-like metamaterial
We propose a vortex-like metamaterial device that is capable of transferring
image along a spiral route without losing subwavelength information of the
image. The super-resolution image can be guided and magnified at the same time
with one single design. Our design may provide insights in manipulating
super-resolution image in a more flexible manner. Examples are given and
illustrated with numerical simulations.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Breaking the challenge of signal integrity using time-domain spoof surface plasmon polaritons
In modern integrated circuits and wireless communication systems/devices,
three key features need to be solved simultaneously to reach higher performance
and more compact size: signal integrity, interference suppression, and
miniaturization. However, the above-mentioned requests are almost contradictory
using the traditional techniques. To overcome this challenge, here we propose
time-domain spoof surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) as the carrier of signals.
By designing a special plasmonic waveguide constructed by printing two narrow
corrugated metallic strips on the top and bottom surfaces of a dielectric
substrate with mirror symmetry, we show that spoof SPPs are supported from very
low frequency to the cutoff frequency with strong subwavelength effects, which
can be converted to the time-domain SPPs. When two such plasmonic waveguides
are tightly packed with deep-subwavelength separation, which commonly happens
in the integrated circuits and wireless communications due to limited space, we
demonstrate theoretically and experimentally that SPP signals on such two
plasmonic waveguides have better propagation performance and much less mutual
coupling than the conventional signals on two traditional microstrip lines with
the same size and separation. Hence the proposed method can achieve significant
interference suppression in very compact space, providing a potential solution
to break the challenge of signal integrity
Negative reflections of electromagnetic waves in chiral media
We investigate the reflection properties of electromagnetic/optical waves in
isotropic chiral media. When the chiral parameter is strong enough, we show
that an unusual \emph{negative reflection} occurs at the interface of the
chiral medium and a perfectly conducting plane, where the incident wave and one
of reflected eigenwaves lie in the same side of the boundary normal. Using such
a property, we further demonstrate that such a conducting plane can be used for
focusing in the strong chiral medium. The related equations under paraxial
optics approximation are deduced. In a special case of chiral medium, the
chiral nihility, one of the bi-reflections disappears and only single reflected
eigenwave exists, which goes exactly opposite to the incident wave. Hence the
incident and reflected electric fields will cancel each other to yield a zero
total electric field. In another word, any electromagnetic waves entering the
chiral nihility with perfectly conducting plane will disappear.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
A class of line-transformed cloaks with easily-realizable constitutive parameters
We propose a class of line-transformed cylindrical cloaks which have
easily-realizable constitutive parameters. The scattering properties of such
cloaks have been investigated numerically for both transverse-electric (TE) and
transverse-magnetic (TM) incidences of plane waves. A line-transformed
invisibility cloak with a perfectly electric conducting (PEC) inner boundary is
actually a reshaping of a PEC line to which the cloaked object is crushed. The
numerical results of near-field distributions and far-field scattering
properties have verified the above conclusions. We also investigate the
relationship between the constitutive parameters of a line-transformed cloak
and the length of the corresponding line. The changing range of constitutive
parameters is large when the line is short, while the changing range becomes
small when the line is long. The above conclusion provides an efficient way to
realize the invisibility cloaks using artificial metamaterials.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
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