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Abstract
Light propagates in various ways depending on environment, including uniform medium, surface/interface and photonic crystals, which appears ubiquitously in daily life and has been exploited for advanced optics technology. We unveiled that a topological photonic crystal exhibits unique electromagnetic (EM) transport properties originating from the Dirac frequency dispersion and multicomponent spinor eigenmodes. Measuring precisely local Poynting vectors in microstrips of honeycomb structure where optics topology emerges upon a band gap opening in the Dirac dispersion and a p-d band inversion induced by a Kekulé-type distortion respecting C6v symmetry, we showed that a chiral wavelet induces a global EM transportation circulating in the direction counter to the source, which is intimately related to the topological band gap specified by a negative Dirac mass. This brand-new Huygens-Fresnel phenomenon can be considered as the counterpart of negative refraction of EM plane waves associated with upwardly convex dispersions of photonic crystals, and our present finding is expected to open a new window for photonic innovations.
Huygens-Fresnel features are useful for harnessing light in unique ways. Here the authors demonstrate a chiral light source that induces globally a counter energy flow in a topological photonics structure with Dirac-type frequency dispersion.
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1 Research Center for Materials Nanoarchitectonics (MANA), National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS), Tsukuba, Japan (GRID:grid.21941.3f) (ISNI:0000 0001 0789 6880); University of Tsukuba, Graduate School of Science and Technology, Tsukuba, Japan (GRID:grid.20515.33) (ISNI:0000 0001 2369 4728)
2 Tongji University, MOE Key Laboratory of Advanced Micro-Structured Materials, School of Physics Science and Engineering, Shanghai, China (GRID:grid.24516.34) (ISNI:0000000123704535)