Spiral field generation in Smith-Purcell radiation by helical metagratings

Moving electrons interacting with media can give rise to electromagnetic radiations and has been emerged as a promising platform for particle detection, spectroscopies, and free-electron lasers. In this letter, we investigate the Smith-Purcell radiation from helical metagratings, chiral structures s...

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Main Authors: Jing, Liqiao, Wang, Zuojia, Lin, Xiao, Zheng, Bin, Xu, Su, Shen, Lian, Yang, Yihao, Gao, Fei, Chen, Min, Chen, Hongsheng
Other Authors: School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145513
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1455132023-02-28T19:33:11Z Spiral field generation in Smith-Purcell radiation by helical metagratings Jing, Liqiao Wang, Zuojia Lin, Xiao Zheng, Bin Xu, Su Shen, Lian Yang, Yihao Gao, Fei Chen, Min Chen, Hongsheng School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences Science::Physics Angular Momentum Dipole Moving electrons interacting with media can give rise to electromagnetic radiations and has been emerged as a promising platform for particle detection, spectroscopies, and free-electron lasers. In this letter, we investigate the Smith-Purcell radiation from helical metagratings, chiral structures similar to deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), in order to understand the interplay between electrons, photons, and object chirality. Spiral field patterns can be generated while introducing a gradient azimuthal phase distribution to the induced electric dipole array at the cylindrical interface. Experimental measurements show efficient control over angular momentum of the radiated field at microwave regime, utilizing a phased electromagnetic dipole array to mimic moving charged particles. The angular momentum of the radiated wave is determined solely by the handedness of the helical structure, and it thus serves as a potential candidate for the detection of chiral objects. Our findings not only pave a way for design of orbital angular momentum free-electron lasers but also provide a platform to study the interplay between swift electrons with chiral objects. Published version 2020-12-23T08:08:27Z 2020-12-23T08:08:27Z 2019 Journal Article Jing, L., Wang, Z., Lin, X., Zheng, B., Xu, S., Shen, L., . . . Chen, H. (2019). Spiral field generation in Smith-Purcell radiation by helical metagratings. Research, 2019, 3806132-. doi:10.34133/2019/3806132 2096-5168 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145513 10.34133/2019/3806132 31549059 2019 en Research © 2019 Liqiao Jing et al. Exclusive Licensee Science and Technology Review Publishing House. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Physics
Angular Momentum
Dipole
spellingShingle Science::Physics
Angular Momentum
Dipole
Jing, Liqiao
Wang, Zuojia
Lin, Xiao
Zheng, Bin
Xu, Su
Shen, Lian
Yang, Yihao
Gao, Fei
Chen, Min
Chen, Hongsheng
Spiral field generation in Smith-Purcell radiation by helical metagratings
description Moving electrons interacting with media can give rise to electromagnetic radiations and has been emerged as a promising platform for particle detection, spectroscopies, and free-electron lasers. In this letter, we investigate the Smith-Purcell radiation from helical metagratings, chiral structures similar to deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), in order to understand the interplay between electrons, photons, and object chirality. Spiral field patterns can be generated while introducing a gradient azimuthal phase distribution to the induced electric dipole array at the cylindrical interface. Experimental measurements show efficient control over angular momentum of the radiated field at microwave regime, utilizing a phased electromagnetic dipole array to mimic moving charged particles. The angular momentum of the radiated wave is determined solely by the handedness of the helical structure, and it thus serves as a potential candidate for the detection of chiral objects. Our findings not only pave a way for design of orbital angular momentum free-electron lasers but also provide a platform to study the interplay between swift electrons with chiral objects.
author2 School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences
author_facet School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences
Jing, Liqiao
Wang, Zuojia
Lin, Xiao
Zheng, Bin
Xu, Su
Shen, Lian
Yang, Yihao
Gao, Fei
Chen, Min
Chen, Hongsheng
format Article
author Jing, Liqiao
Wang, Zuojia
Lin, Xiao
Zheng, Bin
Xu, Su
Shen, Lian
Yang, Yihao
Gao, Fei
Chen, Min
Chen, Hongsheng
author_sort Jing, Liqiao
title Spiral field generation in Smith-Purcell radiation by helical metagratings
title_short Spiral field generation in Smith-Purcell radiation by helical metagratings
title_full Spiral field generation in Smith-Purcell radiation by helical metagratings
title_fullStr Spiral field generation in Smith-Purcell radiation by helical metagratings
title_full_unstemmed Spiral field generation in Smith-Purcell radiation by helical metagratings
title_sort spiral field generation in smith-purcell radiation by helical metagratings
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145513
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