Mass-polariton theory of sharing the total angular momentum of light between the field and matter
Mikko Partanen, Jukka Tulkki

TL;DR
This paper introduces the mass-polariton theory, showing that the total angular momentum of light in a medium is shared between the electromagnetic field and a mass density wave of atoms, resulting in quantized angular momentum.
Contribution
It presents a novel theoretical framework combining optoelastic dynamics to account for atomic motion and angular momentum sharing in light propagation through media.
Findings
Total angular momentum of light includes atomic mass density wave contributions.
The angular momentum of the mass-polariton is quantized as integer multiples of ħ.
Simulation of MDW in silicon supports the theory's predictions.
Abstract
Light propagating in a nondispersive medium is accompanied by a mass density wave (MDW) of atoms set in motion by the optical force of the field itself [Phys. Rev. A 95, 063850 (2017)]. This recent result is in strong contrast with the approximation of fixed atoms, which assumes that atoms are fixed to their equilibrium positions when light propagates in a medium and which is deeply rooted in the conventional electrodynamics of continuous media. In many photonic materials, the atoms carry the majority of the total momentum of light and their motion also gives rise to net transfer of medium mass with a light pulse. In this work, we use optoelastic continuum dynamics combining the optical force field, elasticity theory, and Newtonian mechanics to analyze the angular momentum carried by the MDW. We show that accounting for the MDW in the analysis of the angular momentum gives for the…
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