RESUMO
The spatiotemporal origin of plasmonic chiroptical responses in nanostructures remains unexplored and unclear. Here, two orthogonally oriented Au nanorods as a prototype were investigated, with a giant chiroptical response caused by antisymmetric and symmetric mode excitations for obliquely incident left-handed circular polarization (LCP) and right-handed circular polarization (RCP) light. Time-resolved photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM) was employed to measure the near-field spatial distributions, spectra, and spatiotemporal dynamics of plasmonic modes associated with the chiroptical responses at the nanofemto scale, verifying the characteristic near-field distributions at the resonant wavelengths of the two modes and a very large spectral dichroism for LCP and RCP. More importantly, eigenmode excitations and their contributions to the ultrafast plasmonic chiroptical response in the space-time domain were directly revealed, promoting a full understanding of the ultrafast chiral origin in complex nanostructures. These findings open a way to design chiroptical nanophotonic devices for spatiotemporal control of chiral light-matter interactions.
RESUMO
Time-domain dynamic evolution properties of topological states play an important role in both fundamental physics study and practical applications of topological photonics. However, owing to the absence of available ultrafast time-domain dynamic characterization methods, studies have mostly focused on the frequency-domain-based properties, and there are few reports demonstrating the time-domain-based properties. Here, we measured the dynamic near-field responses of plasmonic topological structures of gold nanochains with the configuration of the Su-Schrieffer-Heeger model by using ultrahigh spatial-temporal resolution photoemission electron microscopy. The dephasing time of plasmonic topological edge states increases with increasing the bulk lattice number that has a threshold requirement and finally reaches saturation. We directly revealed through simulation that there is a transient bulk state in the evolution of topological edge states, that is, the energy undergoes relaxation from oscillation between the bulk lattice and the edge. This work shows a new perspective of time-domain dynamic topological photonics.