Chen Yuntian

·Paper Publications

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Global Mie Scattering: Polarization Morphologies and the Underlying Topological Invariant.
Release time:2021-09-02  Hits:

Indexed by: Journal paper

Journal: ACS omega

Affiliation of Author(s): 光电学院,国家光电研究中心

Place of Publication: 美国

Discipline: Engineering

Funded by: 自然科学基金

Document Type: J

Volume: 5

Issue: 23

Page Number: 14157-14163

Key Words: Photonics,Scattering,Magnetic properties,Molecular structure,Polarization

DOI number: 10.1021/acsomega.0c01843

Date of Publication: 2020-06-02

Teaching and Research Group: c716

Abstract: In various subdisciplines of optics and photonics, Mie theory has been serving as a fundamental language and playing indispensable roles widely. Conventional studies related to Mie scattering largely focus on local properties such as differential cross sections and angular polarization distributions. Though spatially integrated features of total cross sections in terms of both scattering and absorption are routine for investigations, they are intrinsically dependent on the specific morphologies of both the scattering bodies and the incident waves, consequently manifesting no sign of global invariance. Here, we propose a global Mie scattering theory to explore topological invariants for the characterization of scatterings by any obstacles of arbitrarily structured or polarized coherent light. It is revealed that, independent of distributions and interactions among the scattering bodies of arbitrary geometric and optical parameters, in the far field, inevitably, there are directions where the scatterings are either zero or circularly polarized. Furthermore, for each such singular direction, we can assign a half-integer index and the index sum of all those directions are bounded to be a global topological invariant of 2. The global Mie theory we propose, which is mathematically simple but conceptually penetrating, can render new perspectives for light scattering and topological photonics in both linear and nonlinear regimes and would potentially shed new light on the scattering of acoustic and matter waves of various forms.

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Links to published journals: https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c01843