616,679 research outputs found
Is the phase of plane waves an invariant?
Based on the invariance of the phase of waves, plane waves was shown to
propagate with negative frequencies in a medium which moves at superluminal
speeds opposite to the propagation direction of plane waves. The validity of
the invariance of the phase of plane waves was then called into question. A
radical change of the conventional concept of plane waves is recently proposed
to solve the problem of negative frequency of waves. Here, we point out flaws
in that proposal. Thus, the validity of the invariance of the phase of plane
waves remains questionable
Annular interdigital transducer focuses piezoelectric surface waves to a single point
We propose and demonstrate experimentally the concept of the annular
interdigital transducer that focuses acoustic waves on the surface of a
piezoelectric material to a single, diffraction-limited, spot. The shape of the
transducing fingers follows the wave surface. Experiments conducted on lithium
niobate substrates evidence that the generated surface waves converge to the
center of the transducer, producing a spot that shows a large concentration of
acoustic energy. This concept is of practical significance to design new
intense microacoustic sources, for instance for enhanced acouto-optical
interactions
Revisiting time reversal and holography with spacetime transformations
Wave control is usually performed by spatially engineering the properties of
a medium. Because time and space play similar roles in wave propagation,
manipulating time boundaries provides a complementary approach. Here, we
experimentally demonstrate the relevance of this concept by introducing
instantaneous time mirrors. We show with water waves that a sudden change of
the effective gravity generates time-reversed waves that refocus at the source.
We generalize this concept for all kinds of waves introducing a universal
framework which explains the effect of any time disruption on wave propagation.
We show that sudden changes of the medium properties generate instant wave
sources that emerge instantaneously from the entire space at the time
disruption. The time-reversed waves originate from these "Cauchy sources" which
are the counterpart of Huygens virtual sources on a time boundary. It allows us
to revisit the holographic method and introduce a new approach for wave
control.Comment: 5 figure
Cylindrically Polarized Nondiffracting Optical Pulses
We extend the concept of radially and azimuthally polarized optical beams to
the polychromatic domain by introducing cylindrically polarized nondiffracting
optical pulses. In particular, we discuss in detail the case of cylindrically
polarized X-waves, both in the paraxial and nonparaxial regime. The explicit
expressions for the electric and magnetic fields of cylindrically polarized
X-waves is also reported
Terahertz imaging of sub-wavelength particles with Zenneck surface waves
Impact of sub-wavelength-size dielectric particles on Zenneck surface waves on planar metallic antennas is investigated at terahertz (THz) frequencies with THz near-field probe microscopy. Perturbations of the surface waves show the particle presence, despite its sub-wavelength size. The experimental configuration, which utilizes excitation of surface waves at metallic edges, is suitable for THz imaging of dielectric sub-wavelength size objects. As a proof of concept, the effects of a small strontium titanate rectangular particle and a titanium dioxide sphere on the surface field of a bow-tie antenna are experimentally detected and verified using full-wave simulations
Sensor Based on Extending the Concept of Fidelity to Classical Waves
We propose and demonstrate a remote sensor scheme by applying the quantum
mechanical concept of fidelity loss to classical waves. The sensor makes
explicit use of time-reversal invariance and spatial reciprocity in a wave
chaotic system to sensitively and remotely measure the presence of small
perturbations. The loss of fidelity is measured through a classical wave-analog
of the Loschmidt echo by employing a single-channel time-reversal mirror to
rebroadcast a probe signal into the perturbed system. We also introduce the use
of exponential amplification of the probe signal to partially overcome the
effects of propagation losses and to vary the sensitivity.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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