Optical torque induces magnetism at the molecular level

Opt Express. 2019 Jul 22;27(15):21295-21305. doi: 10.1364/OE.27.021295.

Abstract

We report experimental observations of a mechanism that potentially supports and intensifies induced magnetization at optical frequencies without the intervention of spin-orbit or spin-spin interactions. Energy-resolved spectra of scattered light, recorded at moderate intensities (108 W/cm2) and short timescales (<150 fs) in a series of non-magnetic molecular liquids, reveal the signature of torque dynamics driven jointly by the electric and magnetic field components of light at the molecular level. While past experiments have recorded radiant magnetization from magneto-electric interactions of this type, no evidence has been provided to date of the inelastic librational features expected in cross-polarized light scattering spectra due to the Lorentz force acting in combination with optical magnetic torque. Here, torque is shown to account for unpolarized rotational components in the magnetic scattering spectrum under conditions that produce only polarized vibrational features in electric dipole scattering, in excellent agreement with quantum theoretical predictions.