I’ve joined a group of folks on Twitter who have vowed to read roughly a paper a day for an entire year, and will summarize my reading here occasionally. Part 1 can be read here, and part 2 can be read here. Links are provided for those with university access who are interested in reading more.
One note: I’ve been using twitter, for the most part, to record which papers I’ve read, but I’ve been really bad at it! In some cases, I’ve ended up “filling in” papers that I read to make up for those I’ve lost track of, and the dates between twitter and here may not always agree.
1/31: Rotational frequency shift, I. Bialynicki-Birula and Z. Bialynicka-Birula (1997). I’ve mentioned the “angular Doppler effect” before, in which circularly polarized light undergoes a frequency shift when the source or detector is rotated. It also turns out that vortex beams, with a “twist phase,” experience such a rotational shift as well! This is something I’m gearing up to blog about in the near future.
2/1: Radiation pressure on a free liquid surface, A. Ashkin and J. M. Dziedzic (1973). There is a long-running controversy in optics: does the momentum of light increase, or decrease, on entering a transparent medium? We still don’t have a definite answer, but this paper in the 70s made an ingenious test. By shining a beam of light onto a liquid from above, they found that the liquid bulged outward slightly, suggesting that the momentum increases. Others have found other effects…
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