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High-Power Laser Drives Motion in Ultra-thin Photonic Crystal Lightsails via Radiation Pressure
arXiv Physics
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이 매체는 공공·자유 라이선스로 본문을 직접 표시합니다.Physics > Optics
[Submitted on 18 Jun 2026]
Title:High-Power Laser Drives Motion in Ultra-thin Photonic Crystal Lightsails via Radiation Pressure
View PDF HTML (experimental)Abstract:Laser-driven lightsails have emerged as a promising route for accelerating ultralight spacecraft to high speeds using beamed optical energy. Realizing this concept pushes the limits of light-matter interaction, materials science, structural engineering, and nanomechanical design. A central challenge is to create nanophotonic reflectors that combine ultralow mass, large illuminated area, and survival under high optical power densities. No previous experiment has combined these constraints in a single structure sufficient to produce measurable radiation-pressure displacement. Here, we report the largest subwavelength tethered lightsails to date: nanoscale-thickness, millimeter-wide silicon nitride membranes patterned with billions of holes. Despite their subwavelength thickness, they achieve 99% reflection through resonant photonic modes, combining ultralow areal density with high reflectivity. Their compliance enables radiation-pressure displacements of up to 1.75 micrometer, a 50,000-fold increase over previous lightsail optomechanical responses. These thin mirrors are shown to withstand and maintain high reflectivity under directed laser intensities comparable to optical intensities at the surface of the Sun. Together, these results establish a testbed for high-power nanophotonics, directed-energy systems, and light-driven propulsion, defining the practical limits of ultrathin photonic materials under intense optical loading.
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