Vector light fields

Optics f2f ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 195-212
Author(s):  
Charles S. Adams ◽  
Ifan G. Hughes

This chapter considers how all light fields contain non-transverse components. Situations where it is possible to make the longitudinal component larger than the transverse component are highlighted.

Photonics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 283
Author(s):  
Andrey Ustinov ◽  
Svetlana Khonina ◽  
Alexey Porfirev

Recently, there has been increased interest in the shaping of light fields with an inverse energy flux to guide optically trapped nano- and microparticles towards a radiation source. To generate inverse energy flux, non-uniformly polarized laser beams, especially higher-order cylindrical vector beams, are widely used. Here, we demonstrate the use of conventional and so-called generalized spiral phase plates for the formation of light fields with an inverse energy flux when they are illuminated with linearly polarized radiation. We present an analytical and numerical study of the longitudinal and transverse components of the Poynting vector. The conditions for maximizing the negative value of the real part of the longitudinal component of the Poynting vector are obtained.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miao Wang ◽  
Xinke Wang ◽  
Peng Han ◽  
Wenfeng Sun ◽  
Shengfei Feng ◽  
...  

A circularly polarized vortex beam possesses similar focusing properties as a radially polarized beam. This type of beam is highly valuable for developing optical manufacturing technology, microscopy, and particle manipulation. In this work, a left-hand circularly polarized terahertz (THz) vortex beam (CPTVB) is generated by utilizing a THz quarter wave plate and a spiral phase plate. Focusing properties of its longitudinal component Ez are detailedly discussed on the simulation and experiment. With reducing the F-number of the THz beam and comparing with a transverse component Ex of a general circularly polarized THz beam, the simulation results show that the focal spot size and intensity of its Ez component can reach 87 and 50% of Ex under a same focusing condition. In addition, the experimental results still demonstrate that the left-hand CPTVB can always maintain fine Ez focusing properties in a broad bandwidth, which manifest the feasibility of this class of THz beams.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 1982 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanni Modanese

In systems with non-local potentials or other kinds of non-locality, the Landauer-Büttiker formula of quantum transport leads to replacing the usual gauge-invariant current density J with a current J e x t which has a non-local part and coincides with the current of the extended Aharonov-Bohm electrodynamics. It follows that the electromagnetic field generated by this current can have some peculiar properties and in particular the electric field of an oscillating dipole can have a long-range longitudinal component. The calculation is complex because it requires the evaluation of double-retarded integrals. We report the outcome of some numerical integrations with specific parameters for the source: dipole length ∼10−7 cm, frequency 10 GHz. The resulting longitudinal field E L turns out to be of the order of 10 2 to 10 3 times larger than the transverse component (only for the non-local part of the current). Possible applications concern the radiation field generated by Josephson tunnelling in thick superconductor-normal-superconductor (SNS) junctions in yttrium barium oxide (YBCO) and by current flow in molecular nanodevices.


1971 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 343-350 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. S. Chandrasekhariah

AbstractThe propagation of plane waves in a viscoelastic body representing a parallel union of the Kelvin and Maxwell bodies placed in a magneto-thermal field is investigated. It is shown that the longitudinal component of the wave is in general coupled with a transverse component and the wave travels in two families. In particular if the primary magnetic field is either parallel or perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation, the three components of the wave travel unlinked, with either the longitudinal component or the transverse components unaffected by the presence of the electromagnetic field. If the electrical conductivity of the solid is infinite the effect of the primary magnetic field is to increase the values of the material constants. The effect of wave propagation on magnetic permeability is equivalent to an anisotropic rescaling of the primary magnetic field. Some of the results obtained in the earlier works are obtained as particular cases of the more general results derived here.


2017 ◽  
Vol 139 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chi Zhu ◽  
Jung-Hee Seo ◽  
Hani Bakhshaee ◽  
Rajat Mittal

A computational framework consisting of a one-way coupled hemodynamic–acoustic method and a wave-decomposition based postprocessing approach is developed to investigate the biomechanics of arterial bruits. This framework is then applied for studying the effect of the shear wave on the generation and propagation of bruits from a modeled stenosed artery. The blood flow in the artery is solved by an immersed boundary method (IBM) based incompressible flow solver. The sound generation and propagation in the blood volume are modeled by the linearized perturbed compressible equations, while the sound propagation through the surrounding tissue is modeled by the linear elastic wave equation. A decomposition method is employed to separate the acoustic signal into a compression/longitudinal component (curl free) and a shear/transverse component (divergence free), and the sound signals from cases with and without the shear modulus are monitored on the epidermal surface and are analyzed to reveal the influence of the shear wave. The results show that the compression wave dominates the detected sound signal in the immediate vicinity of the stenosis, whereas the shear wave has more influence on surface signals further downstream of the stenosis. The implications of these results on cardiac auscultation are discussed.


1999 ◽  
Vol 389 ◽  
pp. 229-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. MOURI ◽  
H. KUBOTANI ◽  
T. FUJITANI ◽  
H. NIINO ◽  
M. TAKAOKA

Orthonormal wavelet transformations are used to decompose velocity signals of grid turbulence into both space and scale. The transforms exhibit small-scale enhancements of (i) the spatial fluctuation, (ii) the correlation in space between the adjacent scales, and (iii) the correlation in space between the longitudinal and transverse components. The spatial fluctuation and the scale–scale correlation at small scales are more significant in the transverse component than in the longitudinal component. These features are the same for different families of wavelets.Turbulence contains tube-like structures of vorticity. We demonstrate that wavelet transforms of velocities are enhanced at the positions of the tubes, by using a direct numerical simulation. Thus our wavelet analyses have captured the effects of those coherent structures on velocities measured in the experiment, which would be difficult for traditional analysis techniques such as those with velocity increments.


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (12) ◽  
pp. 1850204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yendrembam Chaoba Devi ◽  
Kaushlendra Kumar ◽  
Biswajit Chakraborty ◽  
Frederik G. Scholtz

Beginning with a review of the existing literature on the computation of spectral distances on noncommutative spaces like Moyal plane and fuzzy sphere, adaptable to Hilbert–Schmidt operatorial formulation, we carry out a correction, revision and extension of the algorithm provided in [1] i.e. [F. G. Scholtz and B. Chakraborty, J. Phys. A, Math. Theor. 46 (2013) 085204] to compute the finite Connes’ distance between normal states. The revised expression, which we provide here, involves the computation of the infimum of an expression which involves the “transverse” [Formula: see text] component of the algebra element in addition to the “longitudinal” component [Formula: see text] of [1], identified with the difference of density matrices representing the states, whereas the expression given in [1] involves only [Formula: see text] and corresponds to the lower bound of the distance. This renders the revised formula less user-friendly, as the determination of the exact transverse component for which the infimum is reached remains a nontrivial task, but under rather generic conditions it turns out that the Connes’ distance is proportional to the Hilbert-Schmidt norm of [Formula: see text], leading to considerable simplification. In addition, we can determine an upper bound of the distance by emulating and adapting the approach of [P. Martinetti and L. Tomassini, Commun. Math. Phys. 323 (2013) 107–141]. We then look for an optimal element for which the upper bound is reached. We are able to find one for the Moyal plane through the limit of a sequence obtained by finite-dimensional projections of the representative of an element belonging to a multiplier algebra, onto the subspaces of the total Hilbert space, occurring in the spectral triple and spanned by the eigen-spinors of the respective Dirac operator. This is in contrast with the fuzzy sphere, where the upper bound, which is given by the geodesic of a commutative sphere, is never reached for any finite [Formula: see text]-representation of [Formula: see text]. Indeed, for the case of maximal noncommutativity ([Formula: see text]), the finite distance is shown to coincide exactly with the above-mentioned lower bound, with the transverse component playing no role. This, however, starts changing from [Formula: see text] onwards and we try to improve the estimate of the finite distance and provide an almost exact result, using our revised algorithm. The contrasting features of these types of noncommutative spaces becomes quite transparent through the analysis, carried out in the eigen-spinor bases of the respective Dirac operators.


2012 ◽  
Vol 706 ◽  
pp. 108-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evgeny S. Asmolov ◽  
Olga I. Vinogradova

AbstractIn many applications it is advantageous to construct effective slip boundary conditions, which could fully characterize flow over patterned surfaces. Here we focus on laminar shear flows over smooth anisotropic surfaces with arbitrary scalar slip $b(y)$, varying in only one direction. We derive general expressions for eigenvalues of the effective slip-length tensor, and show that the transverse component is equal to half of the longitudinal one, with a two times larger local slip, $2b(y)$. A remarkable corollary of this relation is that the flow along any direction of the one-dimensional surface can be easily determined, once the longitudinal component of the effective slip tensor is found from the known spatially non-uniform scalar slip.


1949 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 285-310
Author(s):  
Benjamin F. Howell

Summary In summary, the following pulses were recognized on many or all of the records taken in the Los Alamitos region: P The first pulse to arrive. P3 A compressional pulse arriving later than P. X1, X2, X3 Three pulses assumed to be body waves traveling along deeper paths than P and P3. C A strongly dispersed pulse largely confined to the longitudinal component. T Motion on the transverse component arriving largely coincident with C. H A direct elliptical motion in a vertical plane. R A Rayleigh-type motion. P, C, H, and R are prominent on all the records, though at distances less than 300 meters from the explosions C, H and R overlap each other, and are not separable. They are strongly dispersed, and their beginnings are therefore difficult to identify. It is the times of arrival of their maxima which are plotted in the travel-time curves. The recorded pulses of energy are all of types previously reported. However, no completely satisfactory theory explaining C, H, or R exists. Any theory describing these pulses must be based on a knowledge of the fundamental properties of the first few meters of the earth's crust, a complicated medium which is plainly neither homogeneous nor elastic. The fact that such a medium can transmit both compressional and Rayleigh-type waves is an encouraging sign, since it means that its behavior can not be radically different from that of elastic substances. It is to be hoped that the mathematical physicists will soon develop equations describing wave transmission through such media. In closing, the author would like to thank the many persons, especially Dr. Beno Gutenberg of the California Institute of Technology and Dr. R. A. Peterson of United Geophysical Company, for their advice and assistance, without which this research could not have been done.


2002 ◽  
Vol 457 ◽  
pp. 79-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. REPETTO ◽  
M. TUBINO ◽  
C. PAOLA

We study the steady three-dimensional flow field and bed topography in a channel with sinusoidally varying width, under the assumptions of small-amplitude width variations and sufficiently wide channel to neglect nonlinear effects and sidewall effects. The aim of the work is to investigate the role of width variations in producing channel bifurcation in braided rivers. We infer incipient bifurcation in cases where the growth of a central bar leads to planimetric instability of the channel, i.e. when the given infinitesimal width perturbation is enhanced. Results of the three-dimensional model suggest that the equilibrium bottom profile mainly consists of a purely longitudinal component, uniformly distributed over the cross-section, which induces deposition at the wide section and scour at the constriction, and of a transverse component in the form of a central bar (wide sections) and scour (constrictions), with longitudinal wavelength equal to that of width variations. A comparison between the results of the three-dimensional model and those obtained by means of a two-dimensional depth-averaged approach shows that the transverse component is mainly related to three-dimensional effects. Theoretical findings display a satisfactory agreement with results of flume experiments. Transverse variations are responsible for the planimetric instability of the channel; we find that in the range of values of Shields stress typical of braided rivers, the incipient bifurcation is enhanced as the width ratio of the channel increases.


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