Toroidal vortex streets stably flowing in light

Topological waves and their exotic properties are attracting intense research interest. Here, the authors report on the discovery of toroidal vortex street like pulses with robust skyrmionic topology that persists upon propagation over arbitrarily long distances.
Published in Physics
Toroidal vortex streets stably flowing in light
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The Kármán vortex street (KVS), a classical flow pattern of swirling vortices, is highly organised and typically consists of two sequences of vortices, one from each side of the body, with circulations of opposite signs. famous for its aesthetic beauty and immense power.

In the museum at the Church of St Dominic in Bologne, Italy, there is a painting depicting St. Christopher carrying the infant Jesus across a river. The painter has depicted interlaced vortices behind Christopher's bare feet. Theodore von Kármán stated that his research on vortex streets was inspired by this painting. This represents a fascinating intersection of science and the humanities.

In 1940, a suspension bridge named the Tacoma Narrow Bridge, completed just four months, suffered damage due to the generation of vortex streets caused by its improper design, leading to vibrations and resonance. This event marked the first-time humanity recognized the immense power of the KVS.

Recently, in their paper Nat Commun 15, 4863 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-48927-5, collaborating physicists from Singapore and the UK has reported optical analog of KVS. This optical KVS pulse reveals fascinating parallels between fluid transport and energy flow of structured light.

We introduce a type of light pulse which field structure has an intriguing similarity with a von Kármán vortex street, a pattern of swirling vortices observed in fluid and gas dynamics that is responsible for the “singing” of suspended telephone lines in wind. The structured light exhibits robust topological structure of skyrmions in condenser matter. In sharp contrast to earlier work on optical skyrmionic beams and pulses, the skyrmionic field configuration in NDSTPs is not limited by diffraction and persists upon propagation over arbitrary distances. We anticipate that NDSTPs will inspire potential applications such as light-matter interactions, superresolution microscopy, and metrology. ” -- Yijie Shen, Study Lead Author, Nanyang Technological University

Skyrmions, sophisticated topological particles originally proposed as a unified model of the nucleon by Tony Skyrme in 1962, behave like nanoscale magnetic vortices with spectacular textures. To date, all known optical skyrmions in free space that do not propagate or only exist around focus and collapse rapidly upon propagation. Nevertheless, because the light pulses proposed in this paper do not spread during propagation, such skyrmionic fields structures can persist upon the KVS pulse propagation. The pulse allows the study of the propagation dynamics of electromagnetic skyrmionic fields and will be of interest as directed energy channels for information transfer applications. The analogy between KVS in fluid flows and the pulse can be drawn further by considering for instance the motion of electrons along the vortex streets of a transverse magnetic pulses or the propagation of the pulses in nonlinear media

“We believe the deeply subwavelength singularities of those pulses can be applied in metrology as well as they may interest those studying the spectroscopy of toroidal excitations in matter. Additionally, the pulses could be leveraged for long-distance information transfer encoded in the topological features of the pulses, with potential applications in telecommunications, remote sensing, and LiDAR.” the authors forecast.

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Classical and Continuum Physics
Physical Sciences > Physics and Astronomy > Classical and Continuum Physics
Topological effects in photonic systems
Physical Sciences > Physics and Astronomy > Optics and Photonics > Topological effects in photonic systems

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