Abstract

Over the past decades, topology has provided unique insight into numerous physical phenomena. Here, we report on a topological mechanism for spin-dependent photonic transport. We observe photonic topological defects of bound vortex pairs and unbound vortices generated from a two-dimensional array of nanoantennas, i.e., a metasurface, which is achieved by randomly inserting local deformations in the metasurfaces, inducing the Pancharatnam-Berry phase. The observed spin-dependent bound vortex pairs are established as the origin of the photonic topological spin Hall effect-a subdiffraction-limited spin-split mode in momentum space, while the spin-dependent unbound vortices induce random spin-split modes throughout the entire momentum space as a random Rashba effect. The topological phenomena-creation of bound vortex pairs and unbound vortices-indicate the universality of the topological effect for particles of different natures.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call