71 research outputs found
ChatGPT-4 with Code Interpreter can be used to solve introductory college-level vector calculus and electromagnetism problems
We evaluated ChatGPT 3.5, 4, and 4 with Code Interpreter on a set of
college-level engineering-math and electromagnetism problems, such as those
often given to sophomore electrical engineering majors. We selected a set of 13
problems, and had ChatGPT solve them multiple times, using a fresh instance
(chat) each time. We found that ChatGPT-4 with Code Interpreter was able to
satisfactorily solve most problems we tested most of the time -- a major
improvement over the performance of ChatGPT-4 (or 3.5) without Code
Interpreter. The performance of ChatGPT was observed to be somewhat stochastic,
and we found that solving the same problem N times in new ChatGPT instances and
taking the most-common answer was an effective strategy. Based on our findings
and observations, we provide some recommendations for instructors and students
of classes at this level.Comment: Main text and appendice
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Optics at interfaces: ultra-thin color coatings, perfect absorbers, and metasurfaces
The vast majority of optical components and devices in use today can be grouped under the umbrella of ``bulk optics''; i.e. they generally have a non-negligible thickness compared to the wavelength of light. This is true of components from lenses to wave plates to Fabry-Perot etalons, all of which need sufficient thickness such that light waves can accumulate an appropriate amount of phase upon propagation through the structure. In this thesis, we develop and explore a variety of optical components that are thin compared to the wavelength of light and lie at the interface between two materials (i.e. a substrate and air). We explore approaches to filter, absorb, redirect, and re-shape light with flat, ultra-thin structures which are easy to fabricate with modern micro- and nanofabrication techniques.Engineering and Applied Science
Vanadium dioxide as a natural disordered metamaterial: perfect thermal emission and large broadband negative differential thermal emittance
We experimentally demonstrate that a thin (~150 nm) film of vanadium dioxide
(VO2) deposited on sapphire has an anomalous thermal emittance profile when
heated, which arises due to the optical interaction between the film and the
substrate when the VO2 is at an intermediate state of its insulator-metal
transition (IMT). Within the IMT region, the VO2 film comprises nanoscale
islands of metal- and dielectric-phase, and can thus be viewed as a natural,
disordered metamaterial. This structure displays "perfect" blackbody-like
thermal emissivity over a narrow wavelength range (~40 cm-1), surpassing the
emissivity of our black soot reference. We observed large broadband negative
differential thermal emittance over a >10 {\deg}C range: upon heating, the
VO2/sapphire structure emitted less thermal radiation and appeared colder on an
infrared camera. We anticipate that emissivity engineering with thin film
geometries comprising VO2 will find applications in infrared camouflage,
thermal regulation, infrared tagging and labeling.Comment: 3 figure
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Holographic Detection of the Orbital Angular Momentum of Light With Plasmonic Photodiodes
Metallic components such as plasmonic gratings and plasmonic lenses are routinely used to convert free-space beams into propagating surface plasmon polaritons and vice versa. This generation of couplers handles relatively simple light beams, such as plane waves or Gaussian beams. Here we present a powerful generalization of this strategy to more complex wavefronts, such as vortex beams that carry orbital angular momentum, also known as topological charge. This approach is based on the principle of holography: the coupler is designed as the interference pattern of the incident vortex beam and focused surface plasmon polaritons. We have integrated these holographic plasmonic interfaces into commercial silicon photodiodes, and demonstrated that such devices can selectively detect the orbital angular momentum of light. This holographic approach is very general and can be used to selectively couple free-space beams into any type of surface wave, such as focused surface plasmon polaritons and plasmonic Airy beams.Physic
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