ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Electromagnetic pulses are typically treated as space-time (or space-frequency) separable solutions of Maxwells equations, where spatial and temporal (spectral) dependence can be treated separately. In contrast to this traditional viewpoint, recent advances in structured light and topological optics have highlighted the non-trivial wave-matter interactions of pulses with complex topology and space-time non-separable structure, as well as their potential for energy and information transfer. A characteristic example of such a pulse is the Flying Doughnut (FD), a space-time non-separable toroidal few-cycle pulse with links to toroidal and non-radiating (anapole) excitations in matter. Here, we propose a quantum-mechanics-inspired methodology for the characterization of space-time non-separability in structured pulses. In analogy to the non-separability of entangled quantum systems, we introduce the concept of space-spectrum entangled states to describe the space-time non-separability of classical electromagnetic pulses and develop a method to reconstruct the corresponding density matrix by state tomography. We apply our method to the FD pulse and obtain the corresponding fidelity, concurrence, and entanglement of formation. We demonstrate that such properties dug out from quantum mechanics quantitatively characterize the evolution of the general spatiotemporal structured pulse upon propagation.
Topological structures of electromagnetic fields could give access to nontrivial light-matter interactions and additional degrees of freedom for information and energy transfer. A characteristic example of such electromagnetic excitations are space-t
The scattering of electromagnetic pulses is described using a non-singular boundary integral method to solve directly for the field components in the frequency domain, and Fourier transform is then used to obtain the complete space-time behavior. Thi
Metamaterials represent one of the most vibrant fields of modern science and technology. They are generally dispersive structures in the direct and reciprocal space and time domains. Upon this consideration, I overview here a number of metamaterial i
Frequency to time mapping is a powerful technique for observing ultrafast phenomena and non-repetitive events in optics. However, many optical sources operate in wavelength regions, or at power levels, that are not compatible with standard frequency
Space-time (ST) wave packets are coherent pulsed beams that propagate diffraction-free and dispersion-free by virtue of tight correlations introduced between their spatial and temporal spectral degrees of freedom. Less is known of the behavior of inc