Springe direkt zu Inhalt

Physics Colloquium & EXC 3112, TRR 227: Prof. Dr. Olga Smirnova

Jun 12, 2026 | 03:00 PM c.t.

Max Born Institute for Nonlinear Optics and Short Pulse Spectroscopy; Technical University Berlin

Abstract

Chirality—the property that distinguishes left- and right-handed forms of matter—underpins diverse functionalities across scales, from molecules that come in two non-superimposable mirror-image forms known as enantiomers to chiral materials and photonic structures. Yet fast, sensitive, and robust chiral optical detection remains a major challenge because conventional chiroptical spectroscopies access chirality only through weak corrections to the dominant electric-dipole interaction. Here, we introduce temporal chirality—chirality encoded in the time-dependent trajectories traced by vectors such as electric fields or induced polarizations—as a unifying framework that reveals highly efficient enantio-sensitive observables that employ the strongest, electric-dipole way   of light–matter coupling [1].

Synthetic chiral light [2] provides a central example: the Lissajous figure traced by its electric-field vector forms a locally chiral three-dimensional trajectory in time. Correlating local chirality across both time and azimuthal space one can enable chiral topological light [3]. We show that such light enables topologically robust enantio-sensitive signals. We further demonstrate that synthetic chiral light can be efficiently guided in an optical fibers, enabling enantio-sensitive harmonic emission from very small quantities of chiral molecules and opening pathways to compact microfluidic platforms for rapid chiral analysis.

Light-induced polarization in excited chiral molecules can also exhibit temporal chirality, generating geometric fields that influence photoelectron spin and give rise to new mechanisms of spin–chirality coupling [4,5,6]. We find that any excited or photoionized chiral molecule can act as an enantio-sensitive molecular compass [4], defining an internal geometric axis even under isotropic illumination. Just as a traditional compass needle aligns with Earth’s magnetic field, the molecular compass aligns the electron spin with a built-in geometric direction inside the molecule — a direction defined by its handedness. In this way, the molecule generates its own “chiral north,” guiding the electron spin without any magnetic interaction. A complementary Berry-curvature-driven spin torque, activated by photon spin, produces a triple lock between molecular structure, photon spin, and electron spin—providing a geometric and topological foundation for the chirality-induced spin-selectivity (CISS) effect.

 

[1] O. Smirnova, Science 389, 232 (2025)

[2] D. Ayuso et al, Nature Photonics 13 (12), 866 (2024)

[3] N. Mayer et al, Nature Photonics 18 (11), 1155 (2024)

[4] P. C. M. Flores et al, arXiv: 2505.22433

[5] P. C. M. Flores et al, arXiv:2603.02735

[6] P. C. M. Flores et al, arXiv:2505.23460

Time & Location

Jun 12, 2026 | 03:00 PM c.t.

Lecture Hall A (Room 1.3.14)
Department of Physics
Arnimallee 14
14195 Berlin

Further Information

About Physics Colloquium at Freie Universität Berlin

The Physics Colloquium is aimed at everyone who wants to learn about groundbreaking discoveries in current physical research – students, educators, and researchers from Freie Universität Berlin as well as other academic institutions.

Physics Colloquium

About the Cluster of Excellence EXC 3112 “Center for Chiral Electronics”

The aim of this ambitious research program is to develop concepts for energy-efficient electronics. The Center for Chiral Electronics investigates the unique properties of chirality in solid-state and molecular systems, thereby laying the foundations for next-generation electronic technologies. Through interdisciplinary research at the interface of physics and chemistry, the cluster seeks to develop energy-efficient and high-performance materials that meet the global demand for a sustainable digital infrastructure.

Cluster of Excellence EXC 3112

Keywords

  • excellence Cluster
  • Physics Colloquium