For decades, shrinking photonic devices has been much more difficult than miniaturizing electronic components. The challenge comes down to physics. Light cannot be easily confined to very small spaces because the uncertainty principle relates the confinement of light to its wavelength. In visible and near-infrared light, the wavelengths can be up to 1,000 times larger than the de Broglie wavelengths used in electronic circuits. As a result, photonic chips remain relatively large and optical imaging systems face severe resolution limitations.
Scientists had previously investigated plasmonics as a possible workaround. This approach uses metal to force light into a space smaller than its wavelength. However, metals generate large amounts of heat through energy dissipation, which poses a major obstacle to efficient and scalable photonics technology.
In 2024, researchers led by Ma Renmin of Peking University in China made a major breakthrough (nature 632, 287-293 (2024)). The research team developed something called the singular dispersion equation. This is a new theoretical framework showing that light can be confined to very small scales by using lossless dielectric materials instead of metals. Because this method relies entirely on dielectrics, it avoids the heat losses that limit plasmonic systems and could help pave the way to compact and energy-efficient photonic devices.
Discovery of “narwhal-type” wave function
In a newly published paper, e lightthe same research team explains the origin of this extreme optical confinement. According to the researchers, this arises from an entirely new type of electromagnetic eigenmode known as a narwhal wavefunction.
These unusual modes combine two important behaviors. Near the singularity, the electromagnetic field experiences a local power law strengthening. As distance increases, the field rapidly disappears due to a global exponential decay. These properties allow light to be focused and compressed far beyond traditional physical limits.
Using this concept, the team designed and experimentally demonstrated a three-dimensional singular dielectric resonator that can confine light below the diffraction limit in all three spatial dimensions.
Record-breaking light confinement
The researchers used near-field scanning measurements to directly observe the narwhal-shaped wavefunction in action. Their measurements clearly showed the expected power-law increase near the singularity and an exponential decay further away.
The experimental observations were in close agreement with both the theoretical predictions and the full 3D simulations. The system achieved an ultra-small mode volume of only 5 × 10-7 λ3, providing an exceptional level of optical confinement.
A new type of optical microscope
The researchers also exploited the extreme localization of the narwhal-shaped wavefunction to develop a new near-field scanning optical microscopy technique called singular optical microscopy.
By exciting the eigenmodes of a unique dielectric cavity, the microscope generates highly localized electromagnetic fields. Small changes in nearby structures cause measurable resonance shifts, allowing the system to detect extremely fine details.
The researchers demonstrated an unprecedented spatial resolution of λ/1000 and were able to image deep subwavelength patterns including the letters “PKU” and “SFM.”
Rise of “Synchronics”
This study shows that the singular dispersion equation produces a narwhal-shaped wavefunction that can confine light on very small scales within lossless dielectric materials.
Researchers say this discovery forms the basis of something called singuronics. This is a new nanophotonics framework focused on controlling and confining light well below traditional limits without dissipating energy. This advance could support ultra-efficient information processing techniques, create new opportunities in quantum optics, and expand the capabilities of super-resolution imaging.

