FYI: just a heads-up for the theorists in the group.

-Mark

 

Collaboration Resolves Century-Long Debate Over How to Describe
Electromagnetic Momentum Density in Matter

December 28, 2011

 

Researchers from the NIST Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology and
the University of British Columbia have shown that the interaction between a
light pulse and a light-absorbing object, including the momentum transfer
and resulting movement of the object, can be calculated for any positive
index of refraction using a few, well-established physical principles
combined with a new model for mass transfer from light to matter.*  This
work creates a foundation for understanding light absorption in
metamaterials, artificially tailored materials of intense interest in
nanophotonics and microwave engineering that can have negative indices of
refraction, and have potential applications in high resolution imaging,
lithography, optical sensing, high gain antennas, and stealth radar
coatings.

 

Light carries momentum and can transfer momentum to matter via radiation
pressure. However, for the past century, there has been an ongoing debate
over the correct form of the electromagnetic momentum density in matter.  In
the "Minkowski formulation," the momentum density is proportional to the
index of refraction; in direct contrast, the "Abraham formulation" finds it
to be inversely proportional.  While light is known to carry mass, a
detailed model for mass transfer from light to a medium that absorbs light
had not been formulated to date.  The researchers propose a set of
postulates for light-matter interaction that encompass: a) the Maxwell
equations, which govern classical electromagnetic behavior; b) a generalized
Lorentz force law, which describes the force felt by matter in the presence
of an electromagnetic field; c) a model for electromagnetic mass density
transfer to an absorbing medium; and d) the Abraham formulation of momentum
density.  Using both closed-form calculations and numerical simulations of
the interaction between an electromagnetic pulse and a test slab, the
researchers demonstrated that their postulates yield results that are
consistent with conservation of energy, mass, momentum, and center-of-mass
velocity at all times. They further showed that satisfaction of the last two
conservation laws unambiguously identifies the Abraham form as the true form
of momentum density in a positive-index medium.  In addition to the
theoretical significance of these results and the implications for
metamaterials, the results will enable more accurate modeling of
light-matter interaction at the nanoscale and open new routes to optical
control of nano-mechanical systems incorporating light absorbing materials.

 

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