November 26, 2025 – Researchers from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HU) have discovered that the magnetic component of light plays a significant role in how it interacts with matter, creating  new possibilities in optics, spintronics, and quantum technologies. 

The study was led by Dr. Amir Capua and Ph.D. candidate Benjamin Assouline at HU’s Institute of Electrical Engineering and Applied Physics and published in Nature’s Scientific Reports. It challenges the Faraday Effect, a 180-year-old scientific understanding of one of physics’ foundational phenomena, in which the polarization of light rotates as it passes through a material exposed to a constant magnetic field.  

This study presents the first theoretical proof that the oscillating magnetic field of light directly contributes to the Faraday Effect and overturns the assumption that only the electric field of light mattered.  

In simple terms, it’s an interaction between light and magnetism,” explains Dr. Capua. “The static magnetic field ‘twists’ the light, and the light, in turn, reveals the magnetic properties of the material. What we’ve found is that the magnetic part of light has a first-order effect; it’s surprisingly active in this process.” 

Since its discovery in 1845 by the British scientist Michael Faraday, the effect has been attributed to the interaction between the electric field of light and the electric charges in matter. However, the new research demonstrates that the magnetic field of light, long thought irrelevant, makes a direct and measurable contribution to this effect, whereby it interacts with the spins. 

Using advanced calculations based on the Landau–Lifshitz–Gilbert (LLG) equation, which describes the motion of spins in magnetic systems, the researchers showed that the magnetic field of light can generate a magnetic torque inside the material, just like a static magnetic field. “In other words,” says Capua, “light doesn’t just illuminate matter, it magnetically influences it.” 

To quantify this influence, the team applied their model to Terbium Gallium Garnet (TGG), a crystal widely used to measure the Faraday Effect. They found that the magnetic field of light accounts for about 17% of the observed rotation at visible wavelengths and up to 70% in the infrared range. 

“Our results show that light ‘talks’ to matter not only through its electric field, but also through its magnetic field, a component that has been largely overlooked until now,” says  Assouline. 

The research paper titled “Faraday Effects Emerging from the Optical Magnetic Field” is now available in Scientific Reports (Nature) and can be accessed here.

Researchers:

Benjamin Assouline, Amir Capua

Institutions:

Institute of Electrical Engineering and Applied Physics, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem