Presentation
11 June 2024 Optical nonreciprocal forces, ergodicity, and entropy of space-time crystals
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The time crystal is an eagerly sought phase of matter, a many-body strongly correlated system with broken time-translation symmetry and ergodicity. We demonstrate that a classical metamaterial nanostructure - a two-dimensional array of plasmonic metamolecules supported on nanowires - exhibit complex picometer scale dynamics in presence of light. It can be driven to a state possessing all the key features of a continuous space-time crystal: continuous coherent illumination by light resonant with the metamolecules’ plasmonic mode triggers a spontaneous first order phase transition to a superradiant-like state of transmissivity oscillations, resulting from many-body interactions among the metamolecules. The space-time crystal is characterized by long-range order in space and time, broken ergodicity and reduced spectral entropy that are driven by non-reciprocal non-Hamiltonian forces of light pressure.
Conference Presentation
© (2024) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Nikolay I. Zheludev, Tongjun Liu, Venugopal Raskatla, Jinxiang Li, and Kevin F. MacDonald "Optical nonreciprocal forces, ergodicity, and entropy of space-time crystals", Proc. SPIE PC12990, Metamaterials XIV, PC129900E (11 June 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3023372
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KEYWORDS
Crystals

Crystal optics

Plasmonics

Light sources and illumination

Nanostructures

Nanowires

Optical metamaterials

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