Optomechanical measurement of photon spin angular momentum and optical torque in integrated photonic devices
Li He, Huan Li, Mo Li

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the measurement of photon spin angular momentum and optical torque in integrated photonic devices, revealing the mechanical effects of photon polarization and enabling new optomechanical applications.
Contribution
It introduces the first measurement of photon spin angular momentum and optical torque in integrated photonics, showing polarization-controlled mechanical effects on-chip.
Findings
Photon spin angular momentum can be measured in birefringent waveguides.
Optical torque depends on photon polarization states.
Photon polarization can be used to control optomechanical motion.
Abstract
Photons carry linear momentum, and spin angular momentum when circularly or elliptically polarized. During light-matter interaction, transfer of linear momentum leads to optical forces, while angular momentum transfer induces optical torque. Optical forces including radiation pressure and gradient forces have long been utilized in optical tweezers and laser cooling. In nanophotonic devices optical forces can be significantly enhanced, leading to unprecedented optomechanical effects in both classical and quantum regimes. In contrast, to date, the angular momentum of light and the optical torque effect remain unexplored in integrated photonics. Here, we demonstrate the measurement of the spin angular momentum of photons propagating in a birefringent waveguide and the use of optical torque to actuate rotational motion of an optomechanical device. We show that the sign and magnitude of the…
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