Disorder-Induced Coherence Enables Control of Wave Transport
Israel Kurtz, Yiming Huang, Zhou Shi, Azriel Z Genack

TL;DR
This study investigates how wave coherence and interference evolve within disordered media, revealing mechanisms that enable control over wave transmission even in highly scattering environments.
Contribution
It provides experimental and numerical insights into modal contributions and coherence evolution across transmission eigenchannels in disordered media.
Findings
High-transmission eigenchannels maintain near-perfect modal alignment with increasing sample length.
Destructive interference suppresses low-transmission channels despite significant modal contributions.
Transmission can be measured far below the noise floor, revealing detailed eigenchannel behavior.
Abstract
The transmission matrix of a disordered medium, experimentally accessible for classical waves and central to the theory of mesoscopic electronic transport, supports transmission eigenchannels ranging from complete to vanishing transmission. This range reflects wave coherence, yet the evolution of coherence with depth across eigenchannels has not been examined. Using microwave measurements and numerical simulations, we show how wave interference evolves with depth within the sample to produce constructive or destructive interference in high- and low-transmission eigenchannels, respectively. In the highest-transmission eigenchannel, the alignment of modal contributions from the waveguide modes of an incident eigenchannel can become nearly perfect as the sample length increases, allowing transmission to remain high despite extensive multiple scattering. Although the contributions in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRandom lasers and scattering media · Terahertz technology and applications · Microwave Imaging and Scattering Analysis
