Time-dependent theory of optical electro- and magnetostriction
Mikko Partanen, Bruno Anghinoni, Nelson G. C. Astrath, Jukka Tulkki

TL;DR
This paper develops a time-dependent covariant theory of optical force densities in dielectrics, explaining differences in electrostriction experiments and revealing the roles of wave momentum and optostrictive forces during light propagation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel covariant framework for optical force densities that unifies static and dynamic electro- and magnetostriction, accounting for energy conservation and dissipation effects.
Findings
Identifies two components of optical force density: wave momentum and optostrictive forces.
Shows optostrictive force density does not contribute to net momentum transfer.
Simulates Gaussian pulse propagation in dielectric materials using the new theory.
Abstract
Electrostriction, the deformation of dielectric materials under the influence of an electric field, is of continuous interest in optics. The classic experiment by Hakim and Higham [Proc. Phys. Soc. 80, 190 (1962)] for a stationary field supports a different formula of the electrostrictive force density than the recent experiment by Astrath et al. [Light Sci. Appl. 11, 103 (2022)] for an optical field. In this work, we study the origin of this difference by developing a time-dependent covariant theory of optical force densities in photonic materials. When a light pulse propagates in a bulk dielectric, the field-induced force density consists of two parts: (i) The optical wave momentum force density carries the wave momentum of light and drives forward a mass density wave of the covariant coupled field-material state of light. (ii) The optostrictive force density arises from the atomic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagneto-Optical Properties and Applications · Phase-change materials and chalcogenides · Thermography and Photoacoustic Techniques
