Mapping the Magnetic Field Intensity of Light with the Nonlinear Optical Emission of a Silicon Nanoparticle.
Guang-Can LiJin XiangYong-Liang ZhangFu DengMingcheng PanmaiWeijie ZhuangSheng LanDang Yuan LeiPublished in: Nano letters (2021)
To detect the magnetic component of arbitrary unknown optical fields, a candidate probe must meet a list of demanding requirements, including a spatially isotropic magnetic response, suppressed electric effect, and wide operating bandwidth. Here, we show that a silicon nanoparticle satisfies all these requirements, and its optical magnetism driven multiphoton luminescence enables direct mapping of the magnetic field intensity distribution of a tightly focused femtosecond laser beam with varied polarization orientation and spatially overlapped electric and magnetic components. Our work establishes a powerful nonlinear optics paradigm for probing unknown optical magnetic fields of arbitrary electromagnetic structures, which is not only essential for realizing subwavelength-scale optical magnetometry but also facilitates nanophotonic research in the magnetic light-matter interaction regime.