Scientists Propose Tractor Beam
Concept to Capture Particles Using Light
November 27, 2018 -- Physicists fromITMO University [in Saint
Petersburg , Russia ] have developed a model of
an optical tractor beam able to capture particles based on new artificial
materials. Such a beam is capable of moving particles or cells towards the
radiation source. The study showed that hyperbolic metasurfaces have great
potential for experiments on the creation of the tractor beam, as well as for
its practical applications. The results have been published in ACS
Photonics.
November 27, 2018 -- Physicists from
Tractor beams are familiar to many thanks to the Star Wars and Star Trek
franchises, as well as the countless images of a UFO kidnapping a cow. However,
scientists have yet to create such rays in reality, and there are already
several ways to make objects move towards a source of light. So far, however,
these objects are represented by small particles and atoms instead of whole
cows.
Researchers from ITMO University recently suggested using metamaterials to
create the beams. Metamaterials are artificial periodic structures with unusual
optical properties consisting of repetitive elements. For instance,
metamaterials can support hyperbolic modes: special states of the
electromagnetic field that appear when the metamaterial interacts with light.
Such states help to control the optical forces that influence objects on the
material surface, and, as it turns out, can help to move particles towards the
light source.
“Our work is fully devoted to creating a tractor beam
based on meta-surfaces as well as to studying the physics behind it. We found
out that this effect appears due to the propagation of hyperbolic modes in
metamaterials. Such modes act as an additional scattering channel and,
according to the law of conservation of momentum, can push the particle in the
direction of the light source. At the same time, metamaterials have a number of
other advantages compared with alternative methods of obtaining the tractor
beam. Therefore, metasurfaces are more convenient for practical use,” says Alexander
Shalin, the head of the International Laboratory “Nano-optomechanics”
at ITMO University.
In
2016, scientists from ITMO University proposed another model of a tractor beam,
one based on plasmon resonance and propagating surface plasmon waves
(oscillations of electron gas near a metal surface). The flat substrate allowed
researchers to work with the entire surface of the material instead of small
areas, as is with classical plasmon tweezers. However, the new study showed that
metamaterials based on flat structures that support both hyperbolic and plasmon
modes can become an even better basis for tractor beams. Metasurfaces and
metamaterials work with light in the entire visible wavelength range and better
cope with energy losses. All this makes them promising for the experimental
implementation of the attracting ray.
“Despite the fact that in the near future this technology
will not help us to catch spaceships or kidnap cows, it can still be used, for
example, to create special traps for particles and cells or to conduct chemical
reactions selectively,” notes Alexander Ivinskaya, the lead
author of the article and staff member of the International Laboratory
“Nano-optomechanics” at ITMO University.
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