1,395 research outputs found

    Seeing a ghost: hybrid waves in anisotropic crystals

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    Coherent Virtual Absorption Based on Complex Zero Excitation for Ideal Light Capturing

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    Absorption of light is directly associated with dissipative processes in a material. In suitably tailored resonators, a specific level of dissipation can support coherent perfect absorption, the time-reversed analogue of lasing, which enables total absorption and zero scattering in open cavities. On the contrary, the scattering zeros of lossless objects strictly occur at complex frequencies. While usually considered non-physical due to their divergent response in time, these zeros play a crucial role in the overall scattering dispersion. Here, we introduce the concept of coherent virtual absorption, accessing these modes by temporally shaping the incident waveform. We show that engaging these complex zeros enables storing and releasing the electromagnetic energy at will within a lossless structure for arbitrary amounts of time, under the control of the impinging field. The effect is robust with respect to inevitable material dissipation and can be realized in systems with any number of input ports. The observed effect may have important implications for flexible control of light propagation and storage, low-energy memory, and optical modulation.Comment: To be published in Optic

    Chiral Polaritonics: Analytical Solutions, Intuition, and Use

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    Preferential selection of a given enantiomer over its chiral counterpart has become increasingly relevant in the advent of the next era of medical drug design. In parallel, cavity quantum electrodynamics has grown into a solid framework to control energy transfer and chemical reactivity, the latter requiring strong coupling. In this work, we derive an analytical solution to a system of many chiral emitters interacting with a chiral cavity similar to the widely used Tavis-Cummings and Hopfield models of quantum optics. We are able to estimate the discriminating strength of chiral polaritonics, discuss possible future development directions and exciting applications such as elucidating homochirality, and deliver much needed intuition to foster the newly flourishing field of chiral polaritonics

    Towards chiral polaritons

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    Coupling between light and material excitations underlies a wide range of optical phenomena. Polaritons are eigenstates of a coupled system with hybridized wave function. Owing to their hybrid composition, polaritons exhibit at the same time properties typical for photonic and electronic excitations, thus offering new ways for controlling electronic transport and even chemical kinetics. While most theoretical and experimental efforts have been focused on polaritons with electric-dipole coupling between light and matter, in chiral quantum emitters, electronic transitions are characterized by simultaneously nonzero electric and magnetic dipole moments. Geometrical chirality affects the optical properties of materials in a profound way and enables phenomena that underlie our ability to discriminate enantiomers of chiral molecules. Thus, it is natural to wonder what kinds of novel effects chirality may enable in the realm of strong light-matter coupling. Right now, this field located at the intersection of nanophotonics, quantum optics, and chemistry is in its infancy. In this Perspective, we offer our view towards chiral polaritons. We review basic physical concepts underlying chirality of matter and electromagnetic field, discuss the main theoretical and experimental challenges that need to be solved, and consider novel effects that could be enabled by strong coupling between chiral light and matter
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