4.4 Article

Non-singular cloaks allow mimesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF OPTICS
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/2040-8978/13/2/024012

Keywords

quantum optics; transformation optics; metamaterials; anisotropic optical materials; invisibility

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Funding

  1. EPSRC [EPF/027125/1]

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We design non-singular cloaks enabling objects to scatter waves like objects with smaller size and very different shapes. We consider the Schrodinger equation, which is valid, for example, in the contexts of geometrical and quantum optics. More precisely, we introduce a generalized non-singular transformation for star domains, and numerically demonstrate that an object of nearly any given shape surrounded by a given cloak scatters waves in exactly the same way as a smaller object of another shape. When a source is located inside the cloak, it scatters waves as if it were located some distance away from a small object. Moreover, the invisibility region actually hosts almost trapped eigenstates. Mimetism is numerically shown to break down for the quantified energies associated with confined modes. If we further allow for non-isomorphic transformations, our approach leads to the design of quantum super-scatterers: a small size object surrounded by a quantum cloak described by a negative anisotropic heterogeneous effective mass and a negative spatially varying potential scatters matter waves like a larger nano-object of different shape. Potential applications might be, for instance, in quantum dots probing. The results in this paper, as well as the corresponding derived constitutive tensors, are valid for cloaks with any arbitrary star-shaped boundary cross sections, although for numerical simulations we use examples with piecewise linear or elliptic boundaries.

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