Experimental observation of a fundamental length scale of waves in random media

Waves propagating through a weakly scattering random medium show a pronounced branching of the flow accompanied by the formation of freak waves, i.e., extremely intense waves. Theory predicts that this strong fluctuation regime is accompanied by its own fundamental length scale of transport in rando...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPhysical review letters Vol. 111; no. 18; p. 183902
Main Authors Barkhofen, S, Metzger, J J, Fleischmann, R, Kuhl, U, Stöckmann, H-J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.11.2013
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Summary:Waves propagating through a weakly scattering random medium show a pronounced branching of the flow accompanied by the formation of freak waves, i.e., extremely intense waves. Theory predicts that this strong fluctuation regime is accompanied by its own fundamental length scale of transport in random media, parametrically different from the mean free path or the localization length. We show numerically how the scintillation index can be used to assess the scaling behavior of the branching length. We report the experimental observation of this scaling using microwave transport experiments in quasi-two-dimensional resonators with randomly distributed weak scatterers. Remarkably, the scaling range extends much further than expected from random caustics statistics.
ISSN:1079-7114
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevLett.111.183902