106 research outputs found
Statistics of the Mesoscopic Field
We find in measurements of microwave transmission through quasi-1D dielectric
samples for both diffusive and localized waves that the field normalized by the
square root of the spatially averaged flux in a given sample configuration is a
Gaussian random process with position, polarization, frequency, and time. As a
result, the probability distribution of the field in the random ensemble is a
mixture of Gaussian functions weighted by the distribution of total
transmission, while its correlation function is a product of correlators of the
Gaussian field and the square root of the total transmission.Comment: RevTex: 5 pages, 2 figures; to be presented at Aspects of Quantum
Chaotic Scattering (Dresden, March 7-12, 2005
Signatures of photon localization
Signatures of photon localization are observed in a constellation of
transport phenomena which reflect the transition from diffusive to localized
waves. The dimensionless conductance, g, and the ratio of the typical spectral
width and spacing of quasimodes, \delta, are key indicators of electronic and
classical wave localization when inelastic processes are absent. However, these
can no longer serve as localization parameters in absorbing samples since the
affect of absorption depends upon the length of the trajectories of partial
waves traversing the sample, which are superposed to create the scattered
field. A robust determination of localization in the presence of absorption is
found, however, in steady-state measurements of the statistics of radiation
transmitted through random samples. This is captured in a single parameter, the
variance of the total transmission normalized to its ensemble average value,
which is equal to the degree of intensity correlation of the transmitted wave,
\kappa. The intertwined effects of localization and absorption can also be
disentangled in the time domain since all waves emerging from the sample at a
fixed time delay from an exciting pulse, t, are suppressed equally by
absorption. As a result, the relative weights of partial waves emerging from
the sample, and hence the statistics of intensity fluctuations and correlation,
and the suppression of propagation by weak localization are not changed by
absorption, and manifest the growing impact of weak localization with t.Comment: RevTex 16 pages, 12 figures; to appear in special issue of J. Phys. A
on quantum chaotic scatterin
Extended quasimodes within nominally localized random waveguides
We have measured the spatial and spectral dependence of the microwave field
inside an open absorbing waveguide filled with randomly juxtaposed dielectric
slabs in the spectral region in which the average level spacing exceeds the
typical level width. Whenever lines overlap in the spectrum, the field exhibits
multiple peaks within the sample. Only then is substantial energy found beyond
the first half of the sample. When the spectrum throughout the sample is
decomposed into a sum of Lorentzian lines plus a broad background, their
central frequencies and widths are found to be essentially independent of
position. Thus, this decomposition provides the electromagnetic quasimodes
underlying the extended field in nominally localized samples. When the
quasimodes overlap spectrally, they exhibit multiple peaks in space.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to PRL (23 December 2005
Measurement of the Probability Distribution of Total Transmission in Random Waveguides
Measurements have been made of the probability distribution of total
transmission of microwave radiation in waveguides filled with randomly
positioned scatterers which would have values of the dimensionless conductance
g near unity. The distributions are markedly non-Gaussian and have exponential
tails. The measured distributions are accurately described by diagrammatic and
random matrix calculations carried out for nonabsorbing samples in the limit g
>> 1 when g is expressed in terms of the variance of the distribution, which
equals the degree of long-range intensity correlation across the output face of
the sample.Comment: 5 pages, 5 post script figures, RevTe
Field and intensity correlations in random media
Measurements of the microwave field transmitted through a random medium
allows direct access to the field correlation function, whose complex square is
the short range or C1 contribution to the intensity correlation function C. The
frequency and spatial correlation function are compared to their Fourier pairs,
the time of flight distribution and the specific intensity, respectively. The
longer range contribution to intensity correlation is obtained directly by
subtracting C1 from C and is in good agreement with theory.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.
- …