366 research outputs found

    Geometrodynamics of polarized light: Berry phase and spin Hall effect in a gradient-index medium

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    We review the geometrical-optics evolution of an electromagnetic wave propagating along a curved ray trajectory in a gradient-index dielectric medium. A Coriolis-type term appears in Maxwell equations under transition to the rotating coordinate system accompanying the ray. This term describes the spin-orbit coupling of light which consists of (i) the Berry phase responsible for a trajectory-dependent polarization variations and (ii) the spin Hall effect representing polarization-dependent trajectory perturbations. These mutual phenomena are described within universal geometrical structures underlying the problem and are explained by the dynamics of the intrinsic angular momentum carried by the wave. Such close geometro-dynamical interrelations illuminate a dual physical nature of the phenomena.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures, review to appear in special issue of J. Opt. A: Pure Appl. Op

    Spin and orbital angular momenta of acoustic beams

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    We analyze spin and orbital angular momenta in monochromatic acoustic wave fields in a homogeneous medium. Despite being purely longitudinal (curl-free), inhomogeneous acoustic waves generically possess nonzero spin angular momentum density caused by the local rotation of the vector velocity field. We show that the integral spin of a localized acoustic wave vanishes in agreement with the spin-0 nature of longitudinal phonons. We also show that the helicity or chirality density vanishes identically in acoustic fields. As an example, we consider nonparaxial acoustic Bessel beams carrying well-defined integer orbital angular momentum, as well as nonzero local spin density, with both transverse and longitudinal components. We describe the nontrivial polarization structure in acoustic Bessel beams and indicate a number of observable phenomena, such as nonzero energy density and purely-circular transverse polarization in the center of the first-order vortex beams.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Goos-H\"anchen and Imbert-Fedorov beam shifts: An overview

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    We consider reflection and transmission of polarized paraxial light beams at a plane dielectric interface. The field transformations taking into account a finite beam width are described based on the plane-wave representation and geometric rotations. Using geometrical-optics coordinate frames accompanying the beams, we construct an effective Jones matrix characterizing spatial-dispersion properties of the interface. This results in a unified self-consistent description of the Goos-H\"anchen and Imbert-Fedorov shifts (the latter being also known as spin-Hall effect of light). Our description reveals intimate relation of the transverse Imbert-Fedorov shift to the geometric phases between constituent waves in the beam spectrum and to the angular momentum conservation for the whole beam. Both spatial and angular shifts are considered as well as their analogues for the higher-order vortex beams carrying intrinsic orbital angular momentum. We also give a brief overview of various extensions and generalizations of the basic beam-shift phenomena and related effects.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figure, to appear in J. Opt. (special issue "Beam shifts"

    Transverse spin and momentum in two-wave interference

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    We analyze the interference field formed by two electromagnetic plane waves (with the same frequency but different wave vectors), and find that such field reveals a rich and highly non-trivial structure of the local momentum and spin densities. Despite the seemingly-planar and extensively-studied character of the two-wave system, we find that it possesses a transverse (out-of-plane) helicity-independent spin density, and also a transverse polarization-dependent momentum density with unusual physical properties. The polarization-dependent transverse momentum represents the so-called Belinfante spin momentum, which does not exert the usual optical pressure and it is considered as `virtual' in field theory. We perform analytical estimations and exact numerical simulations of the interaction of the two-wave field with probe Mie particles. The results of these calculations clearly indicate the straightforward detectability of the unusual spin and momentum properties in the two-wave field and strongly motivate their future experimental verifications.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, Supplementary Information, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Classical Field Approach to Quantum Weak Measurements

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    By generalizing the quantum weak measurement protocol to the case of quantum fields, we show that weak measurements probe an effective classical background field that describes the average field configuration in the spacetime region between pre- and post-selection boundary conditions. The classical field is itself a weak value of the corresponding quantum field operator and satisfies equations of motion that extremize an effective action. Weak measurements perturb this effective action, producing measurable changes to the classical field dynamics. As such, weakly measured effects always correspond to an effective classical field. This general result explains why these effects appear to be robust for pre- and post-selected ensembles, and why they can also be measured using classical field techniques that are not weak for individual excitations of the field.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, published versio
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