42 research outputs found
Broadband suppression of backscattering at optical frequencies using low permittivity dielectric spheres
The exact suppression of backscattering from rotationally symmetric objects
requires dual symmetric materials where . This prevents
their design at many frequency bands, including the optical one, because
magnetic materials are not available. Electromagnetically small non-magnetic
spheres of large permittivity offer an alternative. They can be tailored to
exhibit balanced electric and magnetic dipole polarizabilities, which result in
approximate zero backscattering. In this case, the effect is inherently
narrowband. Here, we put forward a different alternative that allows broadband
functionality: Electromagnetically large spheres made from low permittivity
materials. The effect occurs in a parameter regime that approaches the trivial
case, where approximate duality is met in a
weakly wavelength dependence fashion. Despite the low permittivity, the overall
scattering response of the spheres is still significant. Radiation patterns
from these spheres are shown to be highly directive across an octave spanning
band. The effect is analytically and numerically shown using the Mie
coefficients.Comment: 6 Figure
A conformally invariant derivation of average electromagnetic helicity
The average helicity of a given electromagnetic field measures the difference between the number of left- and right-handed photons contained in the field. Here, the average helicity is derived using the conformally invariant inner product for Maxwell fields. Several equivalent integral expressions in momentum space, in (r,t) space, and in the time-harmonic (r,ω) space are obtained, featuring Riemann–Silberstein-like fields and potentials. The time-harmonic expressions can be directly evaluated using the outputs of common numerical solvers of Maxwell equations. The results are shown to be equivalent to the well-known volume integral for the average helicity, featuring the electric and magnetic fields and potential
Interaction of atomic systems with quantum vacuum beyond electric dipole approximation
The photonic environment can significantly influence emission properties and interactions among atomic systems. In such scenarios, frequently the electric dipole approximation is assumed that is justified as long as the spatial extent of the atomic system is negligible compared to the spatial variations of the field. While this holds true for many canonical systems, it ceases to be applicable for more contemporary nanophotonic structures. To go beyond the electric dipole approximation, we propose and develop in this article an analytical framework to describe the impact of the photonic environment on emission and interaction properties of atomic systems beyond the electric dipole approximation. Particularly, we retain explicitly magnetic dipolar and electric quadrupolar contributions to the light-matter interactions. We exploit a field quantization scheme based on electromagnetic Green’s tensors, suited for dispersive materials. We obtain expressions for spontaneous emission rate, Lamb shift, multipole-multipole shift and superradiance rate, all being modified with dispersive environment. The considered influence could be substantial for suitably tailored nanostructured photonic environments, as demonstrated exemplarily
Electromagnetic duality symmetry and helicity conservation for the macroscopic Maxwell's equations (previously "Experimental demonstration of electromagnetic duality symmetry breaking")
Modern physics is largely devoted to study conservation laws, such as charge,
energy, linear momentum or angular momentum, because they give us information
about the symmetries of our universe. Here, we propose to add the relationship
between electromagnetic duality and helicity to the toolkit. Generalized
electromagnetic duality symmetry, broken in the microscopic Maxwell's equations
by the empirical absence of magnetic charges, can be restored for the
macroscopic Maxwell's equations. The restoration of this symmetry is shown to
be independent of the geometry of the problem. These results provide a simple
and powerful tool for the study of light-matter interactions within the
framework of symmetries and conservation laws. We apply such framework to the
experimental investigation of helicity transformations in cylindrical
nanoapertures, and we find that the transformation is significantly enhanced by
the coupling to surface modes, where electromagnetic duality is strongly
broken.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figure
Dual electromagnetism: Helicity, spin, momentum, and angular momentum
The dual symmetry between electric and magnetic fields is an important
intrinsic property of Maxwell equations in free space. This symmetry underlies
the conservation of optical helicity, and, as we show here, is closely related
to the separation of spin and orbital degrees of freedom of light (the helicity
flux coincides with the spin angular momentum). However, in the standard
field-theory formulation of electromagnetism, the field Lagrangian is not dual
symmetric. This leads to problematic dual-asymmetric forms of the canonical
energy-momentum, spin, and orbital angular momentum tensors. Moreover, we show
that the components of these tensors conflict with the helicity and energy
conservation laws. To resolve this discrepancy between the symmetries of the
Lagrangian and Maxwell equations, we put forward a dual-symmetric Lagrangian
formulation of classical electromagnetism. This dual electromagnetism preserves
the form of Maxwell equations, yields meaningful canonical energy-momentum and
angular momentum tensors, and ensures a self-consistent separation of the spin
and orbital degrees of freedom. This provides rigorous derivation of results
suggested in other recent approaches. We make the Noether analysis of the dual
symmetry and all the Poincar\'e symmetries, examine both local and integral
conserved quantities, and show that only the dual electromagnetism naturally
produces a complete self-consistent set of conservation laws. We also discuss
the observability of physical quantities distinguishing the standard and dual
theories, as well as relations to quantum weak measurements and various optical
experiments.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figur