We designed a metamaterial field rotator that can rotate electromagnetic wave fronts. Our starting point was the transformation-media concept. Effective medium theories and full simulations facilitated the actual design process. We created at a very simple structure comprising of an array of identical aluminum metal plates. We made and measured a sample and we experimentally demonstrated the field rotation effect as well as the broadband functionality at microwave frequencies.
By studying acoustic and electromagnetic wave transmission through a periodic array of subwavelength holes or slits with various channel lengths, we demonstrate both experimentally and theoretically that diffraction evanescent waves can play an important role in tuning the Fabry-Perot ͑FP͒ resonances. In particular, there can be total transmission peaks at wavelengths much below that of the Rayleigh-Wood limit, and FP resonances can occur for channel length ϳ16% thinner than the half wavelength. In addition, the FP resonance condition can be tuned via both the periodicity and area fraction of holes. As a function of the ratio between the periodicity and plate thickness, the FP resonance is smoothly linked to the surface-wave-like mode induced by the periodic structure factor.
The most intriguing properties of non-Hermitian systems are found near the exceptional points (EPs) at which the Hamiltonian matrix becomes defective. Due to the complex topological structure of the energy Riemann surfaces close to an EP and the breakdown of the adiabatic theorem due to non-Hermiticity, the state evolution in non-Hermitian systems is much more complex than that in Hermitian systems. For example, recent experimental work [Doppler et al. Nature 537, 76 (2016)] demonstrated that dynamically encircling an EP can lead to chiral behaviors, i.e., encircling an EP in different directions results in different output states. Here, we propose a coupled ferromagnetic waveguide system that carries two EPs and design an experimental setup in which the trajectory of state evolution can be controlled in situ using a tunable external field, allowing us to dynamically encircle zero, one or even two EPs experimentally. The tunability allows us to control the trajectory of encircling in the parameter space, including the size of the encircling loop and the starting/end point. We discovered that whether or not the dynamics is chiral actually depends on the starting point of the loop. In particular, dynamically encircling an EP with a starting point in the parity-time-broken phase results in non-chiral behaviors such that the output state is the same no matter which direction the encircling takes. The proposed system is a useful platform to explore the topology of energy surfaces and the dynamics of state evolution in non-Hermitian systems and will likely find applications in mode switching controlled with external parameters.
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