4 research outputs found
Lateral Casimir Force on a Rotating Particle near a Planar Surface
We study the lateral Casimir force experienced by a particle that rotates
near a planar surface. The origin of this force lies in the symmetry breaking
induced by the particle rotation in the vacuum and thermal fluctuations of its
dipole moment, and, therefore, in contrast to lateral Casimir forces previously
described in the literature for corrugated surfaces, it exists despite the
translational invariance of the planar surface. Working within the framework of
fluctuational electrodynamics, we derive analytical expressions for the lateral
force and analyze its dependence on the geometrical and material properties of
the system. In particular, we show that the direction of the force can be
controlled by adjusting the particle-surface distance, which may be exploited
as a new mechanism to manipulate nanoscale objects.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Photonic spin Hall effect in hyperbolic metamaterials for polarization-controlled routing of subwavelength modes
The routing of light in a deep subwavelength regime enables a variety of important applications in photonics, quantum information technologies, imaging and biosensing. Here we describe and experimentally demonstrate the selective excitation of spatially confined, subwavelength electromagnetic modes in anisotropic metamaterials with hyperbolic dispersion. A localized, circularly polarized emitter placed at the boundary of a hyperbolic metamaterial is shown to excite extraordinary waves propagating in a prescribed direction controlled by the polarization handedness. Thus, a metamaterial slab acts as an extremely broadband, nearly ideal polarization beam splitter for circularly polarized light. We perform a proof of concept experiment with a uniaxial hyperbolic metamaterial at radio-frequencies revealing the directional routing effect and strong subwavelength λ/300 confinement. The proposed concept of metamaterial-based subwavelength interconnection and polarization-controlled signal routing is based on the photonic spin Hall effect and may serve as an ultimate platform for either conventional or quantum electromagnetic signal processing