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Focused laser beams allow controlling mechanical motion of objects and can serve as a tool for assembling complex micro and nano structures in space. While in a vast majority of cases small particles experience attractive gradient forces and repulsive radiation pressure, introduction of additional degrees of freedom into optomechanical manipulation suggests approaching new capabilities. Here we analyze optical forces acting on a high refractive index silicon sphere in a focused Gaussian beam and reveal new regimes of particles anti-trapping. Multipolar analysis allows separating an optical force into interception and recoil components, which have a completely different physical nature resulting in different mechanical actions. In particular, interplaying interception radial forces and multipolar resonances within a particle can lead to either trapping or anti-trapping scenarios, depending of the overall system parameters. At the same time, the recoil force generates a significant azimuthal component along with an angular-dependent radial force. Those contribution enable enhancing either trapping or anti-trapping regimes and also introduce bending reactions. These effects are linked to the far-field multipole interference resulting and, specifically, to its asymmetric scattering diagrams. The later approach is extremely useful, as it allows assessing the nature of optomechanical motion by observing far-field patterns. Multipolar engineering of optical forces, being quite general approach, is not necessarily linked to simple spherical shapes and paves a way to new possibilities in microfluidic applications, including sorting and micro assembly of nontrivial volumetric geometries.
We derive upper and lower bounds on the Casimir--Polder force between an anisotropic dipolar body and a macroscopic body separated by vacuum via algebraic properties of Maxwells equations. These bounds require only a coarse characterization of the sy
We present a scheme for obtaining stable Casimir suspension of dielectric nontouching objects immersed in a fluid, validated here in various geometries consisting of ethanol-separated dielectric spheres and semi-infinite slabs. Stability is induced b
In mixtures of colloids and nonadsorbing polyelectrolytes, a Donnan potential arises across the region between surfaces that are depleted of polyelectrolyte and the rest of the system. This Donnan potential tends to shift the polyelectrolyte density
Electromagnetism in substance is characterized by permittivity (dielectric constant) and permeability (magnetic permeability). They describe the substance property {it effectively}. We present a {it geometric} approach to it. Some models are presente
Casimir and Casimir-Polder repulsion have been known for more than 50 years. The general Lifshitz configuration of parallel semi-infinite dielectric slabs permits repulsion if they are separated by a dielectric fluid that has a value of permittivity