There’s no escaping it: though the tractor beam is a staple of sci-fi  space-faring scenarios, it’s also extremely counter-intuitive. How does  one pull something in via an outward propagating beam? Now a few  Chinese researchers think they’ve found the answer via a theoretical method that should generate a backward pulling force from a forward traveling stream of photons.
The Fudan University team won’t be capturing rebel tranports with  their beam any time soon--it only works (theoretically) at the  nano-level--but it does achieve an interesting turnabout of physical  force. 
We know photons exert an outward momentum; this is what allows  solar sails to harness sunlight to generate small amounts of thrust. But  carefully tuned to meet two conditions, a system can be created to turn  “push” into “pull.”
The conditions: For one, the momentum of the outward propagation must be  very small. Second, several multipoles within the target particle must  be excited at the same time, scattering the beam. 
If the angle of this  beam scattering is just right, the total forward momentum can be  negative--that is, it can have negative thrust which equates to reverse  thrust, or pull--meaning the target is pulled back down the stream of  photons toward the source. 
Voila: Tractor beam.
 It won’t reel in a crippled satellite or an enemy battle cruiser, but  it could be used at the nanoscale to manipulate particles in  interesting ways that could be especially useful in optical systems.  That is, if it works in practice as well as it does in theory. 
by "environment clean generations"

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