Extinction of coherent backscattering by a disordered photonic crystal with a Dirac spectrum

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Published 16 January 2009 Europhysics Letters Association
, , Citation R. A. Sepkhanov et al 2009 EPL 85 14005 DOI 10.1209/0295-5075/85/14005

0295-5075/85/1/14005

Abstract

Photonic crystals with a two-dimensional triangular lattice have a conical singularity in the spectrum. Close to this so-called Dirac point, Maxwell's equations reduce to the Dirac equation for an ultrarelativistic spin-1/2 particle. Here we show that the half-integer spin and the associated Berry phase remain observable in the presence of disorder in the crystal. While constructive interference of a scalar (spin-zero) wave produces a coherent backscattering peak, consisting of a doubling of the disorder-averaged reflected photon flux, the destructive interference caused by the Berry phase suppresses the reflected intensity at an angle which is related to the angle of incidence by time reversal symmetry. We demonstrate this extinction of coherent backscattering by a numerical solution of Maxwell's equations and compare with analytical predictions from the Dirac equation.

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10.1209/0295-5075/85/14005