Tunable negative refraction without absorption via electromagnetically induced chirality
Abstract
We show that negative refraction with minimal absorption can be obtained by means of quantum interference effects similar to electromagnetically induced transparency. Coupling a magnetic dipole transition coherently with an electric dipole transition leads to electromagnetically induced chirality, which can provide negative refraction without requiring negative permeability, and also suppresses absorption. This technique allows negative refraction in the optical regime at densities where the magnetic susceptibility is still small and with refraction/absorption ratios that are orders of magnitude larger than those achievable previously. Furthermore, the value of the refractive index can be fine-tuned via external laser fields, which is essential for practical realization of sub-diffraction-limit imaging.
Cite
@article{arxiv.quant-ph/0702234,
title = {Tunable negative refraction without absorption via electromagnetically induced chirality},
author = {Jürgen Kästel and Michael Fleischhauer and Susanne F. Yelin and Ronald L. Walsworth},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/0702234},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
4 pages, 5 figures (shortened version, submitted to PRL)