Nanoparticles levitating in light beams reveal secrets of nonlinear dynamics of open systems
The Levitation Photonics research team led by Ota Brzobohatý from the  Institute of Physics of the CAS has prepared a universal tool that  allows to dynamically change the nature of light interaction between  nanoparticles and to observe the so-called nonlinear behaviour of an  open (non-Hermitian) system. 
 
The team has been systematically exploiting the force effects of light  for several decades for practical applications, e.g. as compact optical  tweezers for non-contact manipulation of microorganisms and  nano-objects, a tractor beam or a light sorter for micro-objects. In  recent years, optical forces are also a suitable tool for experimental  model systems that provide a deeper understanding of physical processes  in the nanoworld and at the interface between classical and quantum physics. 
 
A practical understanding of these nanosystems interacting with their  environment is also crucial for further technological advances, e.g. in  energy exchange, sensitivity enhancement of sensors or development of  quantum technologies. The results of the study are published in the  journal Nature Physics. 
 
"The work published in Nature Physics presents an experimental system  with two glass nanoparticles that levitate in light beams. It is unique  in that it allows the physical nature of the light interactions between  the particles to be 'switched'. This property attracted the attention of  our colleagues at the University of Vienna, who published a study of a  different geometry in the same journal issue," says Oto Brzobohatý, head  of the Levitation Photonics research group at the Institute of Photonics  of the CAS. 
 
Why is the experimental model system interesting? Will levitating  nanoparticles be part of quantum technologies?  More information and  answers to these questions can be found in the press release issued on 1  August 2024 in cooperation with the Press Department of the Academy of  Sciences of the Czech Republic.

Photo (ISI CAS): Visualisation of two levitating nanoparticles
 
        









