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Nanostructures enable chip-scale light propagation

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Ashley N. Paddock, [email protected]

New optical nanostructures can slow down photons and fully control light dispersion, a big step forward in figuring out how to carry information on photonic chips without losing control of the phase of the light. Researchers at Columbia University’s Engineering School have shown that it is possible for light to propagate from point A to point B without accumulating any phase. They engineered and observed a metamaterial with a zero refractive index. They discovered that light disperses through the material as if the material were completely missing in space, and that the oscillatory...Read full article

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    Published: October 2011
    Glossary
    dispersion
    Dispersion refers to the phenomenon where different wavelengths (colors) of light travel at different speeds when passing through a medium. This variation in the speed of light for different colors causes the light to spread out or disperse, resulting in the separation of the colors. The most common example of dispersion is the separation of white light into its constituent colors when it passes through a prism. Sir Isaac Newton first demonstrated this phenomenon by using a glass prism to...
    nano
    An SI prefix meaning one billionth (10-9). Nano can also be used to indicate the study of atoms, molecules and other structures and particles on the nanometer scale. Nano-optics (also referred to as nanophotonics), for example, is the study of how light and light-matter interactions behave on the nanometer scale. See nanophotonics.
    AmericasChee Wei WongColumbia EngineeringColumbia UniversityCommunicationscontrolled light dispersiondispersionelectromagnetic wavesFiltersnanoNew Yorkoptical filtersoptical nanostructuresOpticsphotonic chipsrefractive indexResearch & Technologyself-focusing light beamsTech Pulsetelecommunicationsthin filmszero refractive indexzero-index observationszero-phase delay

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