Does light travel straight? In an optical tornado, it spins!
05 Feb 2016
No
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No

​Visualisation of 3D simulation data illustrating the spiralling propagation of the laser's EM fields, with zero field strength on axis
(Credit: Jorge Vieira, IST Lisbon)

 
Research published in Nature Communications, led by a team at the Instituto Superior Técnico in Lisbon, Portugal and the CLFs Plasma Physics Group, has found a novel way of creating intense optical tornados, unusual forms of laser light beams that spin during propagation.

Research led by a team at the Instituto Superior Técnico in Lisbon, Portugal and the CLF's Plasma Physics Group, has found a novel way of creating intense optical tornados, unusual forms of laser light beams that spin during propagation. This discovery was published on January 28th in the journal Nature Communications (link opens in a new window).

Optical tornadoes, i.e. laser beams with a vortex structure, may revolutionise our understanding of how matter behaves under extreme and so far unexplored conditions.They also have applications in compact accelerators and brilliant x-ray sources, faster optical communication devices, and optical computing.

At ultrahigh intensities, however, their production in the laboratory remains a challenge. The published paper proposes an innovative solution proven at the theoretical level. Researchers from the Instituto Superior Técnico and DCTI/ISCTE in Lisbon, from the CLF's Plasma Physics Group (link opens in a new window), and from the Universities of Oxford and Strathclyde in the UK, took advantage of the optical properties of plasmas, a soup of ions and electrons that interact through electric and magnetic fields.

In this work researchers explored a way to create the optical analogue of a tornado from a very low energy laser beam and demonstrated amplification to high energy. The research team devised a new theory that described this process, and carried out advanced numerical simulations to test their ideas in a virtual laboratory. The numerical simulations were performed using  SuperMUC, one the fastest super-computers in Europe based at the Leibniz Research Centre in Munich, Germany.

"This work is opening  new and exciting perspectives for compact plasma based accelerators and light sources that may be useful not only from a purely scientific point of view, but one that could also have applications, e.g. in medicine or astrophysics. In addition, our results also strongly demonstrate that amplification of these optical signals in optical fibers is possible, a significant result that may benefit ultrafast optical communications." 


Jorge Vieira
Instituto Superior Técnico in Lisbon, Portugal

The broad implications of the results have far reaching potential, and according to one of the other authors  Raoul Trines the paper   "embodies ideas that shares connections with research topics in fluid dynamics and also quantum optics, a research field that promises a new type of quantum computer with immense power."

This research describes new pathways for amplification of intriguing new forms of light beams and experiments are already being planned.


Contact: Springate, Emma (STFC,RAL,CLF)