Cooperative optical wavefront engineering with atomic arrays

Natural materials typically interact weakly with the magnetic component of light which greatly limits their applications. This has led to the development of artificial metamaterials and metasurfaces. However, natural atoms, where only electric dipole transitions are relevant at optical frequencies,...

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Main Authors: Ballantine Kyle E., Ruostekoski Janne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2021-04-01
Series:Nanophotonics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2021-0059
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spelling doaj-fa3b1026bb4346efa61543229fb0a3262021-09-06T19:20:38ZengDe GruyterNanophotonics2192-86062192-86142021-04-011071901190910.1515/nanoph-2021-0059Cooperative optical wavefront engineering with atomic arraysBallantine Kyle E.0Ruostekoski Janne1Department of Physics, Lancaster University, LancasterLA1 4YB, UKDepartment of Physics, Lancaster University, LancasterLA1 4YB, UKNatural materials typically interact weakly with the magnetic component of light which greatly limits their applications. This has led to the development of artificial metamaterials and metasurfaces. However, natural atoms, where only electric dipole transitions are relevant at optical frequencies, can cooperatively respond to light to form collective excitations with strong magnetic, as well as electric, interactions together with corresponding electric and magnetic mirror reflection properties. By combining the electric and magnetic collective degrees of freedom, we show that ultrathin planar arrays of atoms can be utilized as atomic lenses to focus light to subwavelength spots at the diffraction limit, to steer light at different angles allowing for optical sorting, and as converters between different angular momentum states. The method is based on coherently superposing induced electric and magnetic dipoles to engineer a quantum nanophotonic Huygens’ surface of atoms, giving full 2π phase control over the transmission, with close to zero reflection.https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2021-0059beam focusingbeam steeringcooperative optical responsehuygens’ surfacemetasurfacesquantum optics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ballantine Kyle E.
Ruostekoski Janne
spellingShingle Ballantine Kyle E.
Ruostekoski Janne
Cooperative optical wavefront engineering with atomic arrays
Nanophotonics
beam focusing
beam steering
cooperative optical response
huygens’ surface
metasurfaces
quantum optics
author_facet Ballantine Kyle E.
Ruostekoski Janne
author_sort Ballantine Kyle E.
title Cooperative optical wavefront engineering with atomic arrays
title_short Cooperative optical wavefront engineering with atomic arrays
title_full Cooperative optical wavefront engineering with atomic arrays
title_fullStr Cooperative optical wavefront engineering with atomic arrays
title_full_unstemmed Cooperative optical wavefront engineering with atomic arrays
title_sort cooperative optical wavefront engineering with atomic arrays
publisher De Gruyter
series Nanophotonics
issn 2192-8606
2192-8614
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Natural materials typically interact weakly with the magnetic component of light which greatly limits their applications. This has led to the development of artificial metamaterials and metasurfaces. However, natural atoms, where only electric dipole transitions are relevant at optical frequencies, can cooperatively respond to light to form collective excitations with strong magnetic, as well as electric, interactions together with corresponding electric and magnetic mirror reflection properties. By combining the electric and magnetic collective degrees of freedom, we show that ultrathin planar arrays of atoms can be utilized as atomic lenses to focus light to subwavelength spots at the diffraction limit, to steer light at different angles allowing for optical sorting, and as converters between different angular momentum states. The method is based on coherently superposing induced electric and magnetic dipoles to engineer a quantum nanophotonic Huygens’ surface of atoms, giving full 2π phase control over the transmission, with close to zero reflection.
topic beam focusing
beam steering
cooperative optical response
huygens’ surface
metasurfaces
quantum optics
url https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2021-0059
work_keys_str_mv AT ballantinekylee cooperativeopticalwavefrontengineeringwithatomicarrays
AT ruostekoskijanne cooperativeopticalwavefrontengineeringwithatomicarrays
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