The optical torque: Electromagnetic spin and orbital angular momenta conservation laws and their significance
Manuel Nieto-Vesperinas

TL;DR
This paper explores the fundamental conservation laws of electromagnetic spin and orbital angular momenta, revealing new phenomena and interpretations of optical torque, including contributions from wave structure and implications for particle motion.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis of electromagnetic torque based on conservation laws, highlighting the roles of spin, orbital angular momenta, and wave structure, with implications for optical manipulation.
Findings
Recoil torque can cancel intrinsic torque, affecting particle spinning.
Spatial wave structure can induce negative torque and orbital motion.
Decomposition of torque into conservative and non-conservative parts reveals new physical insights.
Abstract
The physics involved in the fundamental conservation equations of the spin and orbital angular momenta leads to new laws and phenomena that I disclose. To this end, I analyse the scattering of an electromagnetic wavefield by the canonical system constituted by a small particle, which I assume dipolar in the wide sense. Specifically, under quite general conditions these laws lead to understanding how is the contribution and weight of each of those angular momenta to the electromagnetic torque exerted by the field on the object, which is shown to consist of an extinction and a scattering, or recoil, part. This leads to an interpretation of its effect different to that taken up till now by many theoretical and experimental works, and implies that a part of the recoil torque cancels the usually called intrinsic torque which was often considered responsible of the particle spinning. In…
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