Abstract

It was proved that the joint operation of electromagnetic reciprocity and n-fold (n ≥ 3) rotational symmetry would secure arbitrary polarization-independent backscattering efficiency [Phys. Rev. B 103(4), 045422 (2021)10.1103/PhysRevB.103.045422]. Here we remove the restriction of reciprocity and study the backscatterings of plane waves by rotationally symmetric magneto-optical structures, with collinear incident wavevector, rotational axis and externally applied magnetic field. It is revealed that though nonreciprocity removes the degeneracy of backscattering efficiencies for circularly-polarized incident waves of opposite handedness, the remaining rotational symmetry is sufficient to guarantee that the efficiency is related to the polarization ellipticity only, having nothing to do with the orientations of the polarization ellipses. Moreover, the backscattering efficiency reaches its extremes (maximum or minimum values) always for circularly-polarized incident waves, and for other polarizations the efficiency is their ellipticity-weighted arithmetic average. The principles we have revealed are dictated by rotational symmetries only, which are irrelevant to specific geometric or optical parameters and are intrinsically robust against any rotational-symmetry preserving perturbations. The correlations we have discovered could be further exploited for fundamental explorations in nonreciprocal photonics and practical applications including polarimetry and ellipsometry.

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