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Dive into the research topics where Joseph Fasel is active.

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Featured researches published by Joseph Fasel.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2007

Morphology of the nonspherically decaying radiation beam generated by a rotating superluminal source

Houshang Ardavan; Arzhang Ardavan; John Singleton; Joseph Fasel; Andrea Schmidt

We consider the nonspherically decaying radiation field that is generated by a polarization current with a superluminally rotating distribution pattern in vacuum, a field that decays with the distance R(P) from its source as R(P)(-1/2), instead of R(P)(-1). It is shown (i) that the nonspherical decay of this emission remains in force at all distances from its source independently of the frequency of the radiation, (ii) that the part of the source that makes the main contribution toward the value of the nonspherically decaying field has a filamentary structure whose radial and azimuthal widths become narrower (as R(P)(-2) and R(P)(-3), respectively) the farther the observer is from the source, (iii) that the loci on which the waves emanating from this filament interfere constructively delineate a radiation subbeam that is nondiffracting in the polar direction, (iv) that the cross-sectional area of each nondiffracting subbeam increases as R(P), instead of R(P)(2), so that the requirements of conservation of energy are met by the nonspherically decaying radiation automatically, and (v) that the overall radiation beam within which the field decays nonspherically consists, in general, of the incoherent superposition of such coherent nondiffracting subbeams. These findings are related to the recent construction and use of superluminal sources in the laboratory and numerical models of the emission from them. We also briefly discuss the relevance of these results to the giant pulses received from pulsars.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2008

Fundamental role of the retarded potential in the electrodynamics of superluminal sources

Houshang Ardavan; Arzhang Ardavan; John Singleton; Joseph Fasel; Andrea Schmidt

We calculate the gradient of the radiation field generated by a polarization current with a superluminally rotating distribution pattern and show that the absolute value of this gradient increases as R(7/2) with distance R, within the sharply focused subbeams that constitute the overall radiation beam from such a source. In addition to supporting the earlier finding that the azimuthal and polar widths of these subbeams become narrower (as R(-3) and R(-1), respectively) with distance from the source, this result implies that the boundary contribution to the solution of the wave equation governing the radiation field does not always vanish in the limit where the boundary tends to infinity (as is commonly assumed in textbooks and the published literature). While the boundary contribution to the retarded solution for the potential can always be rendered equal to zero by means of a gauge transformation that preserves the Lorenz condition, the boundary contribution to the retarded solution of the wave equation for the field may be neglected only if it diminishes with distance faster than the contribution of the source density. In the case of a rotating superluminal source, however, the boundary term in the retarded solution for the field is by a factor of the order of R(1/2)larger than the source term of this solution, in the limit where the boundary tends to infinity. This result explains why an argument based on the solution of the wave equation governing the field in which the boundary term is neglected [such as that presented by Hannay, J. Opt. Soc. A 23, 1530 (2006)] misses the nonspherical decay of the field that is generated by a rotating superluminal source. The only way one can calculate the free-space radiation field of an accelerated superluminal source is via the retarded solution for the potential. Our findings have implications also for the observations of the pulsar emission: The more distant a pulsar, the narrower and brighter its giant pulses should be.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2008

Spectral properties of the nonspherically decaying radiation generated by a rotating superluminal source

Houshang Ardavan; Arzhang Ardavan; John Singleton; Joseph Fasel; Andrea Schmidt

The focusing of the radiation generated by a polarization current with a superluminally rotating distribution pattern is of a higher order in the plane of rotation than in other directions. Consequently, our previously published [J. Opt. Soc. Am. A24, 2443 (2007)] asymptotic approximation to the value of this field outside the equatorial plane breaks down as the line of sight approaches a direction normal to the rotation axis, i.e., is nonuniform with respect to the polar angle. Here we employ an alternative asymptotic expansion to show that, though having a rate of decay with frequency (mu) that is by a factor of order mu(2/3) slower, the equatorial radiation field has the same dependence on distance as the nonspherically decaying component of the generated field in other directions: It, too, diminishes as the inverse square root of the distance from its source. We also briefly discuss the relevance of these results to the giant pulses received from pulsars: The focused, nonspherically decaying pulses that arise from a superluminal polarization current in a highly magnetized plasma have a power-law spectrum (i.e., a flux density S infinity mu(alpha)) whose index (alpha) is given by one of the values -2/3, -2, -8/3, or -4.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2008

Morphology of the nonspherically decaying radiation generated by a rotating superluminal source: reply to comment

Houshang Ardavan; Arzhang Ardavan; John Singleton; Joseph Fasel; Andrea Schmidt

The fact that the formula used by Hannay in the preceding Comment [J. Opt. Soc. Am. A25, 2165 (2008)] is “from a standard text on electrodynamics” neither warrants that it is universally applicable nor that it is unequivocally correct. We have explicitly shown [J. Opt. Soc. Am. A25, 543 (2008)] that, since it does not include the boundary contribution toward the value of the field, the formula in question is not applicable when the source is extended and has a distribution pattern that rotates faster than light in vacuo. The neglected boundary term in the retarded solution to the wave equation governing the electromagnetic field forms the basis of diffraction theory. If this term were identically zero, for the reasons given by Hannay, the diffraction of electromagnetic waves through apertures on a surface enclosing a source would have been impossible.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2009

Fundamental role of the retarded potential in the electrodynamics of superluminal sources: reply to comment

Houshang Ardavan; Arzhang Ardavan; John Singleton; Joseph Fasel; Andrea Schmidt

Neither Eq. (6.52) of Jackson [Classical Electrodynamics, 3rd ed. (Wiley, 1999)] nor Hannays derivation of that equation in the preceding Comment [J. Opt. Soc. Am. A26, 2107 (2009)] is applicable to a source whose distribution pattern moves faster than light in vacuo with nonzero acceleration. It is assumed in Hannays derivation that the retarded distribution of the density of any moving source will be smooth and differentiable if its rest-frame distribution is. By working out an explicit example of a rotating superluminal source with a bounded and smooth density profile, we show that this assumption is erroneous. The retarded distribution of a rotating source with a moderate superluminal speed is, in general, spread over three disjoint volumes (differing in shape from one another and from the volume occupied by the source in its rest frame) whose boundaries depend on the space-time position of the observer. Hannay overlooks the fact that the limits of integration in his expression for the retarded potential are not differentiable, as functions of the coordinates of the observer, when the distribution pattern of the source moves faster than light. These limits, which delineate the boundaries of the retarded distribution of the source, have divergent gradients at those points on the source boundary that approach the observer, along the radiation direction, with the speed of light at the retarded time. In the superluminal regime, derivatives of the integral representing the retarded potential are well defined only as generalized functions.


Journal of Mathematical Physics | 2009

Inadequacies in the conventional treatment of the radiation field of moving sources

Houshang Ardavan; Arzhang Ardavan; John Singleton; Joseph Fasel; Andrea Schmidt

There is a fundamental difference between the classical expression for the retarded electromagnetic potential and the corresponding retarded solution of the wave equation that governs the electromagnetic field. While the boundary contribution to the retarded solution for the potential can always be rendered equal to zero by means of a gauge transformation that preserves the Lorenz condition, the boundary contribution to the retarded solution of the wave equation governing the field may be neglected only if it diminishes with distance faster than the contribution of the source density in the far zone. In the case of a source whose distribution pattern both rotates and travels faster than light in vacuo, as realized in recent experiments, the boundary term in the retarded solution governing the field is by a factor of the order of R1/2 larger than the source term of this solution in the limit that the distance R of the boundary from the source tends to infinity. This result is consistent with the prediction...


arXiv: Astrophysics | 2007

Occurrence of concurrent `orthogonal' polarization modes in the Lienard-Wichert field of a rotating superluminal source

Andrea Schmidt; Houshang Ardavan; Joseph Fasel; John Singleton; Arzhang Ardavan


Archive | 2010

Fitting Fermi LAT Observations Of Millisecond Pulsars To The Spectrum Of The Emission From A Faster-than-light Source

Andrea Schmidt; John Singleton; Houshang Ardavan; Arzhang Ardavan; Joseph Fasel; John Middleditch


Archive | 2010

Determination of the Flux-distance Relationship for Pulsars in the Parkes Multibeam Survey: Violation of the Inverse Square Law Gives Support for a New Model of Pulsar Emission

John Singleton; Pinaki Sengupta; John Middleditch; Tina A. Graves; Alfred Schmidt; Mario R. Perez; Houshang Ardavan; Arzhang Ardavan; Joseph Fasel


Archive | 2010

Quantitative Agreement of Multiwavelength Pulsar Observations with the Spectrum of the Emission from a Rotating Faster-than-light Source Across Sixteen Orders of Magnitude of Frequency

Andrea Schmidt; John Singleton; Houshang Ardavan; Arzhang Ardavan; Joseph Fasel; John Middleditch

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John Singleton

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Andrea Schmidt

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Arzhang Ardavan

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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John Middleditch

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Mario R. Perez

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Arzhang Ardavan

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Pinaki Sengupta

Nanyang Technological University

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