Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Negative Refraction Makes Light Run Backwards in Time J.B. Pendry The Blackett Laboratory Imperial College London SW7 2BZ UK How familiar and safe is the concept of a refractive index: wine glasses sparkle, deep pools appear shallow, camera lenses focus sharp images. ‘Ah yes, light bends towards the surface normal - Snell's law’ and we move on to more interesting topics. My complacency was recently given a jolt by Sheldon Schultz and David Smith of UCSD who reported at the recent American Physical Society meeting in Minneapolis that they had made a material with negative refractive index. What on earth does that mean? Take Snell’s law: light is no longer bent towards the normal but is bent up to and past the normal so that sin θ is negative. A moment’s thought shows that a plane slab of this material focuses light. In fact there is a double focussing effect if the material is thick enough. Check figure 1 which is drawn to obey Snell’s law for a refractive index n = −1 . Figure 1. A negative refractive index medium bends to a negative angle with the surface normal. Light formerly diverging from a point source, is set in reverse and converges back to a point. Released from the medium the light reaches a focus for a second time. One interpretation is to say that time runs backwards inside a negative-n material forcing light to reverse its trajectory whilst it resides in the medium. This explains the double focus effect as light having reversed back through the focal point emerges into a normal system and goes forward through the focus a second time. This and other odd effects, such as a negative Doppler effect and Cerenkov radiation that appears in a direction opposite to the velocity of the charged particle, were described in an old paper by Veselago [1]. He realised that the key to negative-n is a medium in which both the dielectric constant, ε , and the magnetic permeability, µ , are negative. Then a close scrutiny of Maxwell’s equations forces us to choose the minus sign in the conventional formula for the refractive index, n = ± εµ filed as /word/pap/phyworapr00.doc at 07 Apr. 00 /page 1 Negative Refraction Makes Light Run Backwards in Time Materials with negative− ε exist: at optical frequencies most metals have this property, and my own group in collaboration with Tony Holden, Will Stewart and Dave Robbins at Marconi have made artificial negative dielectrics in the GHz band [2,3]. The sticking point is the absence of negative−µ. This last obstacle was removed when Mike Wiltshire (Marconi) and I showed how to make a negative−µ material active in the GHz band [4]. The trick we used was to recognise that electrical currents moving in circles fake the effect of a magnet. So a structure comprising a set of conducting rings will be magnetically active, and by tuning the parameters we were able to show theoretically that negative−µ can be achieved over a relative broad band of GHz frequencies. Our structure is shown in figure 2. Figure 2. Top: the basic building block for negative−µ is a copper ring etched onto a printed circuit board. The double ring structure has capacitance as well as inductance. Below: an extended view of a single layer of the structure. Stacking together many layers produces the negative−µ structure. Schultz and Smith quickly realised that here was the missing ingredient needed for negative refractive index, and constructed a model similar to the one shown above. To this they added a set of thin wires, the ingredients of the negative− ε structure, and measured the properties. As it happens there is a very clear signature: a material with negative−µ/positive− ε expels radiation and will not transmit incident waves. Similarly positive−µ/negative− ε structures also have low transmittance. However making both ε and µ negative will result in a transparent medium. Here are Schultz and Smith’s filed as /word/pap/phyworapr00.doc at 07 Apr. 00 /page 2 Negative Refraction Makes Light Run Backwards in Time measurements shown in figure 3 which demonstrate convincingly that they have achieved the elusive negative-n result. Transmission coefficient (dB) 0 positive ε -10 -20 -30 -40 negative ε -50 5.0 6.0 Frequency (GHz) 7.0 Figure 3. Schultz and Smith’s microwave transmission test of negative refractive index. The green curve shows the response of a split ring structure which exhibits negative−µ in a band around 5GHz and hence has very low transmission. Adding negative− ε results in the red curve where the situation is reversed: in this case both ε and µ are negative in the 5GHz band and transmission is restored. And what next for these magical materials: deep pools whose contents float in mid air; cameras with flat lenses? Have I been drinking too much sparkling wine? [1] [2] Soviet Physics USPEKHI 10, 509 (1968). VG Veselago Phys. Rev. Lett. 76 4773-6 (1996). JB Pendry, AJ Holden, WJ Stewart, I Youngs [3] Phys. Rev. Lett., 76 2480 (1996). DF Sievenpiper ME Sickmiller and E Yablonovitch [4] IEEE transactions on microwave theory and techniques 47, 2075-84 (1999). JB Pendry, AJ Holden, DJ Robbins, and WJ Stewart filed as /word/pap/phyworapr00.doc at 07 Apr. 00 /page 3