4.7 Article

Optical excitations of Skyrmions, knotted solitons, and defects in atoms

Journal

COMMUNICATIONS PHYSICS
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42005-022-00829-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UK EPSRC [EP/S002952/1, EP/P026133/1]
  2. EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Topological Design [EP/S02297X/1]

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By constructing structured light beams, particle-like topological excitations can be formed in atomic gas, providing a new experimental approach for studying topological objects.
Analogies between non-trivial topologies of matter and light have inspired numerous studies, including defect formation in structured light and topological photonic band structures. Three-dimensional topological objects of localised particle-like nature attract broad interest across discipline boundaries from elementary particle physics and cosmology to condensed matter physics. Here we propose how simple structured light beams can be transformed into optical excitations of atoms with considerably more complex topologies representing three-dimensional particle-like Skyrmions. This construction can also be described in terms of linked Hopf maps, analogous to knotted solitons of the Skyrme-Faddeev model. We identify the transverse polarisation density current as the effective magnetic gauge potential for the Chern-Simons helicity term. While we prepare simpler two-dimensional baby-Skyrmions and singular defects using the traditional Stokes vectors on the Poincare sphere for light, particle-like topologies can only be achieved in the full optical hypersphere description that no longer discards the variation of the total electromagnetic phase of vibration. Skyrmions and hopfions are topological elementary excitations originally discussed in particle physics and field theory, and are also created in optical fields. The authors show theoretically that the topology of light beams can be transformed into optical excitations of an atomic gas to form 3D particle-like skyrmions and knotted hopfions, providing a new route to study these exotic objects in the laboratory.

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