The integration of nanoscale electronics with conventional optical devices is
restricted by the diffraction limit of light. Metals can confine light at the
subwavelength scales needed, but they are lossy, while dielectric materials do
not confine evanescent waves outside a waveguide or resonator, leading to cross
talk between components. We introduce a paradigm shift in light confinement
strategy and show that light can be confined below the diffraction limit using
completely transparent artificial media. Our approach relies on controlling the
optical momentum of evanescent waves, an important electromagnetic property
overlooked in photonic devices. For practical applications, we propose a class
of waveguides using this approach that outperforms the cross talk performance
by 1 order of magnitude as compared to any existing photonic structure. Our
work overcomes a critical stumbling block for nanophotonics by completely
averting the use of metals and can impact electromagnetic devices from the
visible to microwave frequency ranges