From ray tracing to waves of topological origin in continuous media

Continuous media commonly support a discrete number of wave modes that are trapped along interfaces defined by spatially varying parameters. In the case of multicomponent wave problems, those trapped modes fill a frequency gap between different wave bands. When they are robust against continuous def...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Antoine Venaille, Yohei Onuki, Nicolas Perez, Armand Leclerc
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SciPost 2023-04-01
Series:SciPost Physics
Online Access:https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.14.4.062
_version_ 1797851566611365888
author Antoine Venaille, Yohei Onuki, Nicolas Perez, Armand Leclerc
author_facet Antoine Venaille, Yohei Onuki, Nicolas Perez, Armand Leclerc
author_sort Antoine Venaille, Yohei Onuki, Nicolas Perez, Armand Leclerc
collection DOAJ
description Continuous media commonly support a discrete number of wave modes that are trapped along interfaces defined by spatially varying parameters. In the case of multicomponent wave problems, those trapped modes fill a frequency gap between different wave bands. When they are robust against continuous deformations of parameters, such waves are said to be of topological origin. It has been realized over the last decades that waves of topological origin can be predicted by computing a single topological invariant, the first Chern number, in a dual bulk wave problem that is much simpler to solve than the original wave equation involving spatially varying coefficients. The correspondence between the simple bulk problem and the more complicated interface problem is usually justified by invoking an abstract index theorem. Here, by applying ray tracing machinery to the paradigmatic example of equatorial shallow water waves, we propose a physical interpretation of this correspondence. We first compute ray trajectories in the phase space given by position and wavenumber of the wave packet, using Wigner-Weyl transforms. We then apply a quantization condition to describe the spectral properties of the original wave operator. This bridges the gap between previous work by Littlejohn and Flynn showing manifestation of Berry curvature in ray tracing equations, and more recent studies that computed the Chern number of flow models by integrating the Berry curvature over a closed surface in parameter space. We find that an integral of Berry curvature over this closed surface emerges naturally from the quantization condition, which allows us to recover the bulk-interface correspondence.
first_indexed 2024-04-09T19:18:46Z
format Article
id doaj.art-34345f531a984e38b5a98851cf01165e
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2542-4653
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-09T19:18:46Z
publishDate 2023-04-01
publisher SciPost
record_format Article
series SciPost Physics
spelling doaj.art-34345f531a984e38b5a98851cf01165e2023-04-05T15:29:16ZengSciPostSciPost Physics2542-46532023-04-0114406210.21468/SciPostPhys.14.4.062From ray tracing to waves of topological origin in continuous mediaAntoine Venaille, Yohei Onuki, Nicolas Perez, Armand LeclercContinuous media commonly support a discrete number of wave modes that are trapped along interfaces defined by spatially varying parameters. In the case of multicomponent wave problems, those trapped modes fill a frequency gap between different wave bands. When they are robust against continuous deformations of parameters, such waves are said to be of topological origin. It has been realized over the last decades that waves of topological origin can be predicted by computing a single topological invariant, the first Chern number, in a dual bulk wave problem that is much simpler to solve than the original wave equation involving spatially varying coefficients. The correspondence between the simple bulk problem and the more complicated interface problem is usually justified by invoking an abstract index theorem. Here, by applying ray tracing machinery to the paradigmatic example of equatorial shallow water waves, we propose a physical interpretation of this correspondence. We first compute ray trajectories in the phase space given by position and wavenumber of the wave packet, using Wigner-Weyl transforms. We then apply a quantization condition to describe the spectral properties of the original wave operator. This bridges the gap between previous work by Littlejohn and Flynn showing manifestation of Berry curvature in ray tracing equations, and more recent studies that computed the Chern number of flow models by integrating the Berry curvature over a closed surface in parameter space. We find that an integral of Berry curvature over this closed surface emerges naturally from the quantization condition, which allows us to recover the bulk-interface correspondence.https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.14.4.062
spellingShingle Antoine Venaille, Yohei Onuki, Nicolas Perez, Armand Leclerc
From ray tracing to waves of topological origin in continuous media
SciPost Physics
title From ray tracing to waves of topological origin in continuous media
title_full From ray tracing to waves of topological origin in continuous media
title_fullStr From ray tracing to waves of topological origin in continuous media
title_full_unstemmed From ray tracing to waves of topological origin in continuous media
title_short From ray tracing to waves of topological origin in continuous media
title_sort from ray tracing to waves of topological origin in continuous media
url https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.14.4.062
work_keys_str_mv AT antoinevenailleyoheionukinicolasperezarmandleclerc fromraytracingtowavesoftopologicaloriginincontinuousmedia