Topological Extraordinary Optical Transmission
Abstract
The incumbent technology for bringing light to the nanoscale, the near-field scanning optical microscope, has notoriously small throughput efficiencies - of the order of 10(-4) - 10(-5), or less. We report on a broadband, topological, unidirectionally-guiding structure, not requiring adiabatic tapering and in principle enabling near-perfect (ideally, ~100%) optical transmission through an unstructured single (POTUS) arbitrarily-subdiffraction slit at its end. Specifically, for a slit width of just lambdaeff / 72 (lambda0 / 138) the attained normalized transmission coefficient reaches a value of 1.52, while for a unidirectional-only (non-topological) device the normalized transmission through a lambdaeff / 21 (~lambda0 / 107) slit reaches 1.14 - both, limited only by inherent material losses, and with zero reflection from the slit. The associated, under ideal conditions, near-perfect optical extraordinary transmission (POET) has implications, among diverse areas in wave physics and engineering, for high-efficiency, maximum-throughput nanoscopes and heat-assisted magnetic recording devices.
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