Unraveling Optical Polarization at Deep Microscopic Scales in Crystalline Materials
Sathwik Bharadwaj, Zubin Jacob

TL;DR
This paper introduces a microscopic optical band theory revealing hidden propagating waves within crystalline materials, challenging traditional macroscopic models and enabling new insights into light-matter interactions at the lattice level.
Contribution
The authors propose a novel quantum-based framework for describing optical polarization in crystals, uncovering hidden deep lattice waves and providing an open-source tool for further exploration.
Findings
Discovered hidden optical waves within 14 crystalline materials.
Showed these waves have unique polarization textures and are not captured by traditional refractive index.
Provided a software package for identifying hidden waves in various materials.
Abstract
Nanophotonics, the study of light-matter interaction at scales smaller than the wavelength of radiation, has widespread applications in plasmonic waveguiding, topological photonic crystals, super-lensing, solar absorbers, and infrared imaging. The physical phenomena governing these effects can be described using a macroscopic homogenized refractive index. However, the lattice-level description of optical polarization in a crystalline material using a quantum theory has been unresolved. Inspired by the dynamics of electron waves and their corresponding band structure, we propose a microscopic optical band theory of solids specifically applicable to optical polarization. This framework reveals propagating waves hidden deep within a crystal lattice. These hidden waves arise from crystal-optical-indices, a family of quantum functions obeying crystal symmetries, and cannot be described by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptical Polarization and Ellipsometry
