1. Introduction
The present work, which can be considered as a continuation of what is given in [
1], is devoted to reporting further more accurate results, related to the delay time that occurs in the modulation transfer between microwave beams. In particular, further information about the origin of the modulation transfer event can be supplied by studying the angular dependence in the orientation of the launcher of the
c.w. beam. The origin of the observed phenomenology [
1] has been firstly recognized in Refs. [
2,
3] and explained by assuming that the nature of the process is stochastic. Indeed, the model adopted in [
2], although still based on the competition of two waves, only one of which assumed modulated, while the other is c.w., hypothesized the stochastic nature of the process only as collateral aspect. On the contrary, in [
3], the possibilities offered by the stochastic character were examined in two possible ways. One interpreted the delay-time as resulting from zig-zag random paths experienced by the “particle”: a kind of motion that is equivalent to the telegrapher’s equation [
4,
5]. The other way, already based on a more conventional electromagnetic approach [
6]—the same is also adopted in the present work—was dependent on the stochastic nature for the presence of a dissipative parameter in Equation (
3) there reported; see below Equation 1 in the present paper. Then, as in Ref. [
1], the model was perfected with the combination of a photon-photon scattering mechanism. This latter was made plausible by making use of considerations of relativistic nature, which lead to a photon virtual mass sufficiently large to well support the hypothesized model.
This fact was even a consequence of the inversion of roles between “real time” and “randomized time” [
4,
5], this latter becoming an observable quantity as usually occurs in classically forbidden processes [
1].
The present work is organized as follows. In
Section 2, we briefly describe the experimental setup. In
Section 3, we present new experimental results of the delay time and their preliminary interpretation.
Section 4 is devoted to a more sophisticated analysis of the experimental results, and the concluding remarks are given in
Section 5.
3. Delay-Time Results: A Preliminary Interpretation
The measurements were performed over the rise or the fall time (of the order of nanoseconds) of the square-wave modulation. The results relative to two determinations vs.
( with
comprised between 15 and 52 cm) are reported in
Figure 2; they show a rather regular oscillating behavior with a spatial periodicity of about 8 cm.
A plausible interpretation of this behavior can be given invoking a model based on the competition (interference) of two waves propagating along two directions forming an angle
between them. According to the analysis of Ref. [
6], the resulting delay can be expressed as
where
and
are the amplitude relative to
and
beam, respectively. According to the assumed stochastic nature of the process [
2,
3], the propagation constant
is given by
, where
a is the dissipative parameter entering the telegrapher’s equation [
4,
5],
is the initial value of
, and
v the propagation velocity. By using
in Equation (
1), we obtain the following expression, suitable for describing the experimental data in
Figure 2:
where
, according to the negative determination in Equation (
1), has to be considered as a fitting parameter,
accounts for the evident amplitude damping, and the constant
for the data offset. The resulting curves obtained for parameter values such as
ns,
,
cm,
cm,
ns,
ns, and
, in order to have a spatial period of ∼8 cm, are depicted in
Figure 1 and represent a rough but plausible description of the experimental data there reported.
The resulting spatial period can be interpreted, as anticipated above, assuming a competition (interference) of two waves forming an angle
between their respective directions of propagation. For a given
value, the dephasing between them, under the approximation of plane waves, will be given by
, and in order to reobtain zero dephasing we need a number
N of steps such that
. This corresponds to a spatial period
, the factor
being due to the plausible existence of standing wave behavior, so that the length of the steps to be considered is not
but rather
[
7], see
Table 1.
From the data reported in
Table 1, we have that the observed spatial period,
cm of
Figure 2, corresponds to an angle
between the direction of these waves. A more accurate and plausible interpretation will be given in
Section 4.
In addition to the results reported in
Figure 2, we have extended the delay-time measurements to the case in which a tilting angle
of the
launcher was about
, see
Figure 3 and
Figure 4. The data there reported, even if comparable with those contained in
Figure 2 obtained with
, exhibit a less regular behavior with respect to that of
Figure 2, but the resulting spatial periodicity is certainly decidedly increased, up to 15–20 cm. This latter value can be attributed to values of
of
, see
Table 1. In
Section 4, we will go into detail regarding this latter aspect.
4. Delay-Time Analysis
In this section, we will try to overcome the interpretation given in
Section 3 for the delay-time results, providing a more convincing one. First, we have to note, as remarked since Ref. [
1], that we are not dealing with long-range propagation but rather with a near-field situation.
Let us assume that the radiated field from the launcher
can be expressed as that of a rectangular aperture having the dimensions of the mouth of the horn launcher, as schematically depicted in
Figure 5. For simplicity, let us also assume the aperture dimensions as very large even along
(
), that is, we assume the behavior to be independent on this coordinate;
, and
being the references axes with their origin
O located in the center of the aperture. Under these assumptions, the field in the semi-space
can be expressed, in the scalar approximation, as a superposition of the plane waves in the form [
8]
where
z is the angle (in the
plane) of the normal of the elementary wave with the
axis,
is the wave number, and
is the angular frequency.
In order to reproduce the field distribution in the -plane of the aperture, we have to extend the limits of the integration of z in the complex plane by putting and , , and being the polar coordinates of the observation point, again in the plane.
In consideration of this fact, and by substituting, the integral in Equation (
3) becomes
where the integration path
C is represented in
Figure 6. For
, we can evaluate the integral (4) in the saddle-point approximation. In this way, the original integration path
is deformed in the steepest-descent path
C, given by one branch of the equation
, which crosses the real axis at
with an angle equal to
, see
Figure 6.
In deforming the integration path, we have to consider the pole contribution if the amplitude contains singularities in the region of the path-deformation.
Let us suppose that there are two poles at the complex points
. Depending on the
value, one or both poles can be captured by the deformed path. In the examples of
Figure 6, with
and
, we have that, for
, only the pole at
is captured; analogously, for
, only the pole at
is captured; whereas, for
, both poles at
are captured.
When one pole is captured, the integral (4) can be expressed as
where the first term represents the normal (saddle-point) contribution: a cylindrical wave according to this unidimensional model; while the second one, due to the pole, represents a complex wave. Depending on the values of
and
, this second contribution can even prevail, in the near field, over the first one, especially when, according to the bidimensional model, the normal contribution becomes
. This latter properly represents a spherical wave that attenuated like
and not like
as in (5) for the cylindrical wave [
9].
By putting
and recalling that
, the contribution of the pole becomes:
This represents a wave propagating in the direction, with a velocity along a path with an angle (phase-path velocity) given by where c is the light velocity in a vacuum, and that, depending on and , can be greater than c (superluminal behavior). Its amplitude attenuates with increasing and , while for and , its contribution may be the dominant one in (5).
However, even if the pole is not captured by the steepest-descent path
C, we still have a contribution that, according to Ref. [
10], can be expressed, apart from the saddle-point contribution, as
where
,
,
, and
is the error function complement.
On the basis of the above considerations Equations (5)–(7), we can better explain the results reported in
Figure 2,
Figure 3 and
Figure 4. When the tilting angle of the launcher
is nearly zero (
, in the case of
Figure 2), the more probable situation of the integration path is the one represented in
Figure 6a. In this case in order to reproduce the spatial periodicity
cm of
Figure 2, both poles at
are captured, with values of
nearly coincident with
. The two involved waves are those of Equation (
5), the periodicity of the amplitude is the one in (6), given by
, with
and
. This, in turn, causes the periodicity in
, Equation (
2), analogously to what is shown in the case of Ref. [
6].
In the cases of tilting angles
(
Figure 3 and
Figure 4), the situation is different, as shown in
Figure 6b,c. There, we have that only one pole,
for
, is captured while
is not, but it is located near the saddle-point, so that its contribution, according to Equation (
7), may be the prevalent one causing a periodicity, determined by
in Equation (
7), that is, by
, a value that, according to
Table 1, would produce a periodicity exaggerated to a size of
cm, while the value resulting from
Figure 3 and
Figure 4, as previously noted, is about 15–20 cm.
However, we have to remark that the contribution due to the captured pole
, although presumably of minor importance due to the distance from the saddle-point with
, would produce a periodicity of less than 4 cm. This latter was not evidenced in the experiments (
Figure 3 and
Figure 4), but it is reasonable to assume it may influence the observation. For
, the situation is similar to the role of the inverted poles.