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Creators/Authors contains: "Genack, Azriel Z"

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  1. The statistics of transmission through random 1D media are generally presumed to be universal and to depend only upon a single dimensionless parameter—the ratio of the sample length and the mean free path, s = L/ℓ. Here we show in numerical simulations and optical measurements of random binary systems, and most prominently in systems for which s < 1, that the statistics of the logarithm of transmission, lnT, are universal for transmission near the upper cutoff of unity and depend distinctively upon the reflectivity of the layer interfaces and their number near a lower cutoff. The universal segment of the probability distribution function of the logarithm of transmission, P(lnT) is manifest with as few as three binary layers. For a given value of s, P(lnT) evolves towards a universal distribution as the number of layers increases. Optical measurements in stacks of 5 and 20 glass coverslips exhibit statistics at low and moderate values of transmission that are close to those found in simulations for 1D layered media, while differences appear at higher transmission where the dwell time in the medium is longer and the wave explores the transverse nonuniformity of the sample. 
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  2. Abstract The diffusion model is used to calculate both the time-averaged flow of particles in stochastic media and the propagation of waves averaged over ensembles of disordered static configurations. For classical waves exciting static disordered samples, such as a layer of paint or a tissue sample, the flux transmitted through the sample may be dramatically enhanced or suppressed relative to predictions of diffusion theory when the sample is excited by a waveform corresponding to a transmission eigenchannel. Even so, it is widely assumed that the velocity of waves is irretrievably randomized in scattering media. Here we demonstrate in microwave measurements and numerical simulations that the statistics of velocity of different transmission eigenchannels are distinct and remains so on all length scales and are identical on the incident and output surfaces. The interplay between eigenchannel velocities and transmission eigenvalues determines the energy density within the medium, the diffusion coefficient, and the dynamics of propagation. The diffusion coefficient and all scattering parameters, including the scattering mean free path, oscillate with the width of the sample as the number and shape of the propagating channels in the medium change. 
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  3. Dynamic and steady-state aspects of wave propagation are deeply connected in lossless open systems ‎in which the scattering matrix is unitary. There is then an equivalence among the energy excited within ‎the medium through all channels, the Wigner time delay, which is the sum of dwell times in all ‎channels coupled to the medium, and the density of states. But these equivalences fall away in the ‎presence of material loss or gain. In this paper, we use microwave measurements, numerical ‎simulations, and theoretical analysis to discover the changing relationships among fundamental wave ‎properties with loss and gain, and their dependence upon dimensionality and spectral overlap. We ‎begin with the demonstrations that the transmission time in random 1D media is equal to the density ‎of states even in the presence of ultrastrong absorption and that its ensemble average is independent ‎of the strengths of scattering and absorption. In contrast, the Wigner time becomes imaginary in the ‎presence of loss, with real and imaginary parts that fall with absorption. In multichannel media, the ‎transmission time remains equal to the density of states and is independent of the scattering strength ‎in unitary systems but falls with absorption to a degree that increases with the strengths of absorption ‎and scattering, and the number of channels coupled to the medium. We show that the relationships ‎between key propagation variables in non-Hermitian systems can be understood in terms of the ‎singularities of the phase of the determinant of the transmission matrix. The poles of the transmission ‎matrix are the same as those of the scattering matrix, but the transmission zeros are fundamentally ‎different. Whereas the zeros of the scattering matrix are the complex conjugates of the poles, the ‎transmission zeros are topological: in unitary systems they occur only singly on the real axis or as ‎conjugate pairs. We follow the evolution and statistics of zeros in the complex plane as random ‎samples are deformed. The sensitivity of the spacing of zeros in the complex plane with deformation ‎of the sample has a square-root singularity at a zero point at which two single zeros and a complex ‎pair interconvert. The transmission time is a sum of Lorentzian functions associated with poles and ‎zeros. The sum over poles is the density of states with an average that is independent of scattering ‎and dissipation. But the sum over zeros changes with loss, gain, scattering strength and the number of ‎channels in ways that make it possible to control ultranarrow spectral features in transmission and ‎transmission time. We show that the field, including the contribution of the still coherent incident ‎wave, is a sum over modal partial fractions with amplitudes that are independent of loss and gain. The ‎energy excited may be expressed in terms of the resonances of the medium and is equal to the dwell ‎time even in the presence of loss or gain.‎ 
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  4. Understanding vanishing transmission in Fano resonances in quantum systems and metamaterials and perfect and ultralow transmission in disordered media has advanced the knowledge and applications of wave interactions. Here, we use analytic theory and numerical simulations to understand and control the transmission and transmission time in complex systems by deforming a medium and adjusting the level of gain or loss. Unlike the zeros of the scattering matrix, the position and motion of the zeros of the determinant of the transmission matrix (TM) in the complex plane of frequency and field decay rate have robust topological properties. In systems without loss or gain, the transmission zeros appear either singly on the real axis or as conjugate pairs in the complex plane. As the structure is modified, two single zeros and a complex conjugate pair of zeros may interconvert when they meet at a square root singularity in the rate of change of the distance between the transmission zeros in the complex plane with sample deformation. The transmission time is the spectral derivative of the argument of the determinant of the TM. It is a sum over Lorentzian functions associated with the resonances of the medium, which is the density of states, and with the zeros of the TM. Transmission vanishes, and the transmission time diverges as zeros are brought near the real axis. Monitoring the transmission and transmission time when two zeros are close may open new possibilities for ultrasensitive detection. 
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