An Ultra-Sub-Wavelength Microwave Polarization Switching Antenna for Covert Communication Implemented With Directed Surface Acoustic Waves in an Artificial Multiferroic Magnonic Crystal
Raisa Fabiha, Erdem Topsakal, Supriyo Bandyopadhyay

TL;DR
This paper introduces a groundbreaking microwave polarization switch using an artificial multiferroic magnonic crystal, enabling ultra-sub-wavelength, covert communication through directed surface acoustic waves and spin wave manipulation.
Contribution
The authors demonstrate the first implementation of a microwave polarization switch at sub-wavelength scales using nanomagnet arrays on a piezoelectric substrate, enabling covert communication.
Findings
Achieved ~90° polarization rotation at microwave frequencies.
Demonstrated switch operation via surface acoustic wave direction control.
Enabled covert point-to-point communication without encryption.
Abstract
Polarization switches are of great technological interest because of their many applications in long distance electromagnetic communication (e.g., polarization division multiplexing). Binary bits can be encoded in the two orthogonal polarizations and transmitted from point to point. Polarization switches, however, are usually much larger than the wavelength of the electromagnetic wave that they transmit. Consequently, most research in this area has focused on the optical regime where the wavelength is relatively short (~1 micron), so that the switch being much larger than the wavelength is not too inconvenient. However, this changes in the microwave regime where the wavelength is much larger (typically > 1 cm). That makes a microwave ultra-sub-wavelength polarization switch very attractive. Here, for the first time to the authors' knowledge, such a switch made of an array of…
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