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Letter

Nature 453, 495-498 (22 May 2008) | doi:10.1038/nature06948; Received 19 September 2007; Accepted 26 March 2008

Open Innovation Challenges

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  • Research Fellow

    • Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
    • Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, 330 Brookline Avenue, Boston, MA 02215
  • Gastroenterologist

    • Wayne State University
    • Detroit, Michigan, USA

A Lévy flight for light

Pierre Barthelemy1, Jacopo Bertolotti1 & Diederik S. Wiersma1

  1. European Laboratory for Nonlinear Spectroscopy and INFM-BEC, via Nello Carrara 1, 50019 Sesto Fiorentino (Florence), Italy

Correspondence to: Diederik S. Wiersma1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to D.S.W. (Email: wiersma@lens.unifi.it).

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A random walk is a stochastic process in which particles or waves travel along random trajectories. The first application of a random walk was in the description of particle motion in a fluid (brownian motion); now it is a central concept in statistical physics, describing transport phenomena such as heat, sound and light diffusion1. Lévy flights are a particular class of generalized random walk in which the step lengths during the walk are described by a 'heavy-tailed' probability distribution. They can describe all stochastic processes that are scale invariant2, 3. Lévy flights have accordingly turned out to be applicable to a diverse range of fields, describing animal foraging patterns4, the distribution of human travel5 and even some aspects of earthquake behaviour6. Transport based on Lévy flights has been extensively studied numerically7, 8, 9, but experimental work has been limited10, 11 and, to date, it has not seemed possible to observe and study Lévy transport in actual materials. For example, experimental work on heat, sound, and light diffusion is generally limited to normal, brownian, diffusion. Here we show that it is possible to engineer an optical material in which light waves perform a Lévy flight. The key parameters that determine the transport behaviour can be easily tuned, making this an ideal experimental system in which to study Lévy flights in a controlled way. The development of a material in which the diffusive transport of light is governed by Lévy statistics might even permit the development of new optical functionalities that go beyond normal light diffusion.