The time reversal of pulsed signals or propagating wave packets has long been recognized to have profound scientific and technological significance. Until now, all experimentally verified time-reversal mechanisms have been reliant upon nonlinear phenomena such as four-wave mixing. In this paper, we report the experimental realization of all-linear time reversal. The time-reversal mechanism we propose is based on the dynamic control of an artificial crystal structure, and is demonstrated in a spin-wave system using a dynamic magnonic crystal. The crystal is switched from an homogeneous state to one in which its properties vary with spatial period a, while a propagating wave packet is inside. As a result, a linear coupling between wave components with wave vectors k≈π/a and k'=k-2π/a≈-π/a is produced, which leads to spectral inversion, and thus to the formation of a time-reversed wave packet. The reversal mechanism is entirely general and so applicable to artificial crystal systems of any physical nature. © 2010 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Chumak, A. V., Tiberkevich, V. S., Karenowska, A. D., Serga, A. A., Gregg, J. F., Slavin, A. N., & Hillebrands, B. (2010). All-linear time reversal by a dynamic artificial crystal. Nature Communications, 1(9). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1142
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