The propagation of light through samples with random inhomogeneities can be described by way of transmission eigenchannels, which connect incoming and outgoing external propagating modes. Although the detailed structure of a disordered sample can generally not be fully specified, these transmission eigenchannels can nonetheless be successfully controlled and used for focusing and imaging light through random media. Here we demonstrate that in deeply localized quasi-1D systems, the single dominant transmission eigenchannel is formed by an individual Anderson-localized mode or by a ‘necklace state’. In this single-channel regime, the disordered sample can be treated as an effective 1D system with a renormalized localization length, coupled through all the external modes to its surroundings. Using statistical criteria of the single-channel regime and pulsed excitations of the disordered samples allows us to identify long-lived localized modes and short-lived necklace states at long and short time delays, respectively.
Sample-to-sample fluctuations of the time-dependent conductance of a system
with static disorder have been studied by means of diagrammatic theory and
microwave pulsed transmission measurements. The fluctuations of time-dependent
conductance are not universal, i.e., depend on sample parameters, in contrast
to the universal conductance fluctuations in the steady-state regime. The
variance of normalized conductance, determined by the infinite-range intensity
correlation C_3(t), is found to increase as a third power of delay time from an
exciting pulse, t. C_3(t) grows larger than the long-range intensity
correlation C_2(t) after a time t_q ~ ^{1/2} t_D (t_D being the diffusion
time, being the average dimensionless conductance).Comment: Revised version, 6 pages, 5 figure
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