The gas turbines powering aircraft engines rely on ceramic coatings that ensure structural stability at high temperatures. But these coatings don’t control heat radiation, limiting the performance of the engine. Researchers at Purdue University have engineered ceramic “nanotubes” that behave as thermal antennas, offering control over the spectrum and direction of high-temperature heat radiation.
Congratulations to Fanglin Bao for his new paper in Optics Letters which talks about - Imaging point sources with low angular separation near or below the Rayleigh criterion are important in astronomy, e.g., in the search for habitable exoplanets near stars. However, the measurement time required to...
Over the past three decades, graphene has become the prototypical platform for discovering topological phases of matter. Both the Chern C ε Z and quantum spin Hall ν ε Z 2 insulators were first predicted in graphene, which led to a veritable explosion of research in topological materials. We...
Classical structured light with controlled polarization and orbital angular momentum (OAM) of electromagnetic waves has varied applications in optical trapping, bio-sensing, optical communications, and quantum simulations. However, quantum noise and photon statistics of three-dimensional photonic...