Updated
Updated · ScienceDaily · May 2
University of Warsaw scientists create optical tornadoes in lowest-energy state
Updated
Updated · ScienceDaily · May 2

University of Warsaw scientists create optical tornadoes in lowest-energy state

5 articles · Updated · ScienceDaily · May 2
  • Working with the Military University of Technology and France's Institut Pascal CNRS, the team used liquid-crystal torons in an optical microcavity and reported the results in Science Advances.
  • The approach produced coherent, laser-like light carrying orbital angular momentum without complex nanostructures, using a synthetic magnetic field created by spatially variable birefringence and tunable by external voltage.
  • Researchers say achieving these vortices in light's stable ground state could simplify miniature photonic sources and support more scalable optical communication and quantum-technology devices.
Beyond quantum communication, could these tiny light vortices be used as microscopic tweezers to manipulate individual cells for medical breakthroughs?
Can these self-forming light tornadoes outperform engineered nanostructures in the race for faster, more powerful quantum devices?

Electrically Tunable Ground-State Optical Vortices Unlock Next-Gen Photonic Devices

Overview

In 2026, researchers achieved a major breakthrough by embedding naturally formed torons—twisted defects in liquid crystals—inside an optical microcavity. This setup enhanced light-matter interaction, creating a synthetic magnetic field that caused photons to exhibit strong spin-orbit coupling. This effect inverted energy levels, making light with orbital angular momentum the system's lowest energy state, resulting in stable optical vortices. These ground-state vortices offer exceptional stability and energy efficiency. Additionally, the team demonstrated that applying an external electric voltage can control the toron size, allowing tunable vortex properties. Using self-organizing liquid crystals also avoids complex nanofabrication, enabling scalable and cost-effective photonic devices.

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