Abstract

Plasma blackout, which contains ablative impurities, strongly attenuates the signal of the reentry spacecraft. Traditional methods focus on mitigating electron densities and impurities around the antenna, and metamaterial-based electromagnetic methods have yet to be proven experimentally. We simulate the plasma blackout problem using laboratory plasma supported by gas discharge technology. Alumina pillars are embedded in the plasma background to form plasma photonic crystals, while topological phase transitions are achieved by shrinking and expanding pillars within a unit cell. The topological edge states (TESs) that are insensitive to weak impurities in the transport path are verified theoretically and experimentally. We introduce the glide-reflection (GR) symmetry in the nontrivial lattices to obtain the gapless edge states, which are exclusively observed in the acoustic systems. Meanwhile, the Δω of the gapless TES increases with the electron densities, ensuring a wide communication bandwidth. Furthermore, the strong coupling of heterostructure with GR symmetry in plasma photonic crystals is elucidated. Our work not only provides a new approach to the blackout communication problem but can also serve as a nascent experimental platform to investigate topological electromagnetic phenomena.

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