We report the first experimental demonstration of time-reversal focusing with electromagnetic waves. An antenna transmits a 1-micros electromagnetic pulse at a central frequency of 2.45 GHz in a high-Q cavity. Another antenna records the strongly reverberated signal. The time-reversed wave is built and transmitted back by the same antenna acting now as a time-reversal mirror. The wave is found to converge to its initial source and is compressed in time. The quality of focusing is determined by the frequency bandwidth and the spectral correlations of the field within the cavity.
We report the first experiments showing the reversibility of transient acoustic waves through highorder multiple scattering by means of an acoustic time-reversal mirror. A point source generates a pulse which scatters through 2000 steel rods immersed in water. The time-reversed waves are found to converge to their source and recover their original wave form, despite the high order of multiple scattering involved and the usual sensitivity to initial conditions of time-reversal processes. Surprisingly, the observed resolution was one-sixth of the theoretical limit for the mirror's aperture.
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