In-situ Physical Adjoint Computing in multiple-scattering electromagnetic environments for wave control
Abstract
Controlling electromagnetic wave propagation in multiple scattering systems is a challenging endeavor due to the extraordinary sensitivity generated by strong multi-path contributions at any given location. Overcoming such complexity has emerged as a central research theme in recent years, motivated both by a wide range of applications -- from wireless communications and imaging to optical micromanipulations -- and by the fundamental principles underlying these efforts. Here, we show that an {\it in-situ} manipulation of the myriad scattering events, achieved through time- and energy-efficient adjoint optimization (AO) methodologies, enables {\it real time} wave-driven functionalities such as targeted channel emission, coherent perfect absorption, and camouflage. Our paradigm shift exploits the highly multi-path nature of these complex environments, where repeated wave-scattering dramatically amplifies small local AO-informed system variations. Our approach can be immediately applied to in-door wireless technologies and incorporated into diverse wave-based frameworks including imaging, power electronic and optical neural networks.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2503.21107,
title = {In-situ Physical Adjoint Computing in multiple-scattering electromagnetic environments for wave control},
author = {John Guillamon and Cheng-Zhen Wang and Zin Lin and Tsampikos Kottos},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.21107},
year = {2025}
}