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The fields within cavities differ in an important respect from those of a laser beam in free space: The bounding surfaces that define the cavity enclosure impose constraints that limit the fields to discrete modes, characterized in part by discrete frequencies. The surfaces enclosing a cavity are boundaries where the dielectric properties change abruptly; they are idealized as discontinuities of the susceptibility ∊ and permeability μ. Across any such surface the normal component of the B field is continuous, as is the transverse component of the E field. These conditions imply, for example, that along a perfectly conducting surface (an idealized mirror) the electric field has a node. The allowed fields (the discrete mode fields) are then particular solutions to the Maxwell equations, or their conversion into Helmholtz equations, that vanish along bounding surfaces.
Figure 4.2 of Sec. 4.1.3 depicts two classes of cavities. Frame (a) shows a cylindrical cavity used for microwave radiation. The cavity completely encloses the field, apart from a small aperture through which the atoms pass. Frame (b) shows a prototype optical cavity, in which the cavity field is that of a beam confined along one axis. Idealized as perfect conductors, the confining mirrors permit only integral half waves between them, and the frequencies of such plane waves are correspondingly discrete. Because the enclosing endmirrors are not perfectly reflecting there will occur some loss through them, along the cavity axis, and the field is not strictly monochromatic.
James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879) was a Scottish physicist well-known for his extensive work with electromagnetism, colour analysis, and kinetic theory. Considered by many to be a giant in his field with significant influence on the physicists who would follow, Maxwell spent time as a professor at Aberdeen University, King's College, London, and Cambridge. This 1882 Life by his friend Lewis Campbell and natural philosopher William Garnett represents an important – and lengthy – investigation into Maxwell's life and thought. Part I is concerned with biographical matters while the second section focuses upon his scientific mind. A third part contains Maxwell's poetry, so included because the poems are 'characteristic of him' and have 'curious biographical interest'. At nearly 700 pages, the Life represents an important starting point for those curious about the state of theoretical physics and the person in whom it reached its culmination in the nineteenth century.
The Home Life of Sir David Brewster, originally published in 1869, records the remarkable life of inventor, physicist, mathematician and astronomer, Sir David Brewster (1781–1868). Written by his daughter, Mrs Margaret M. Gordon, the book is aimed at a non-academic audience, and details the extraordinary life and work of this amazing scientist, who began his studies at Edinburgh University at the age of just twelve, and who is best known for his invention of the kaleidoscope and of the apparatus that initially formed the structure of the core of the lighthouse, and thus his work on the polarization of light. Mrs. Gordon cites Brewster's many activities, including the publication of over 2,000 scientific papers, though she stresses that she has written about her father as the man, and not the scientist. The book will appeal to anyone interested in the life and career of this undoubtedly brilliant Scotsman.
Optical metamaterials are an exciting new field in optical science. A rapidly developing class of these metamaterials are those that allow the manipulation of volume and surface electromagnetic waves in desirable ways by suitably structuring the surfaces they interact with. They have applications in a variety of fields, such as materials science, photovoltaic technology, imaging and lensing, beam shaping and lasing. Describing techniques and applications, this book is ideal for researchers and professionals working in metamaterials and plasmonics, as well as those just entering this exciting new field. It surveys different types of structured surfaces, their design and fabrication, their unusual optical properties, recent experimental observations and their applications. Each chapter is written by an expert in that area, giving the reader an up-to-date overview of the subject. Both the experimental and theoretical aspects of each topic are presented.
Over the past two decades, optical amplifiers have become of key importance in modern communications. In addition to this, the technology has applications in cutting-edge research such as biophotonics and lab-on-a-chip devices. This book provides a comprehensive treatment of the fundamental concepts, theory and analytical techniques behind the modern optical amplifier technology. The book covers all major optical amplification schemes in conventional materials, including the Raman and parametric gain processes. The final chapter is devoted to optical gain in metamaterials, a topic that has been attracting considerable attention in recent years. The authors emphasize analytical insights to give a deeper, more intuitive understanding of various amplification schemes. The book assumes background knowledge of electrical engineering or applied physics, including exposure to electrodynamics and wave motion, and is ideal for graduate students and researchers in physics, optics, bio-optics and communications.
By
A. A. Maradudin, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697 USA,
E. R. Méndez, División de Física Aplicada, Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada, Carretera Ensenada-Tijuana No. 3918, Ensenada, B. C., 22860, México,
T. A. Leskova, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697 USA
A reader of this book will quickly see that structured surfaces, whether deterministic or random, can reflect, transmit, refract, and amplify volume or surface electromagnetic waves in ways that naturally occurring surfaces cannot. They can also change the nature of an electromagnetic field incident on them. For example, they can change a beam with one intensity distribution into a beam with a different intensity distribution, or they can convert a plane wave into a beam. The use of structured surfaces, specifically randomly rough surfaces, to effect such transformations of optical fields is the subject of this chapter, where two examples of this use are presented, namely beam shaping and the formation of pseudo-nondiffracting beams.
The creation of optical elements that transform an electromagnetic beam with a specified transverse intensity distribution into a beam with a different specified transverse intensity distribution, especially those that transform a laser beam with a Gaussian intensity profile into a beam with a constant intensity profile – a flat top beam, has been studied theoretically and experimentally for many years [1–38]. The interest in beam shaping is due to a wide range of applications for beams with a variety of non-Gaussian intensity distributions. These applications include laser surgery [39], laser radar [40], laser microstructuring of materials [41], metal hardening [42], optical communication [43], and optical scanning [44], among others. Some of them and other applications of beam shaping are discussed in the recent book by Dickey et al. [45].
The structuring of a metal at nanoscale dimensions results in novel optical properties that are not present for bulk metals. Metallic photonic crystals, metal-based structures with periodicities on the scale of the wavelength of light, have attracted particular attention due to their unique optical properties. Among the approaches taken to prepare a three-dimensional photonic crystal is to take advantage of the self-assembly of spheres from a colloidal solution. Spherical colloidal particles of polymers or silica with diameters ranging from 20 nm up to 1 μm and larger, with low coefficients of variation in their diameter, are readily available. The methods of producing monodispersive colloids are well discussed in ref. [1]. The importance and interest of these particles lies in the fact that it is possible to induce them into a close-packed structure analogous to an ordinary close-packed crystal. There are several methods for self-assembly of colloidal spheres, in particular, sedimentation, evaporation, and electrophoresis. These close-packed arrays of uniform particles offer an attractive and, in principle, simple means to template the three-dimensional structure of a variety of materials.
Generally, self-assembly is restricted to the formation of close-packed two-dimensional or three-dimensional assemblies of colloidal particles. However, the low cost and availability of a relatively easy protocol to obtain this type of photonic crystals, artificial opals, make the self-assembly technique very attractive and widely used. The next step in the development of this technique to prepare metallic photonic crystal is to infiltrate the sample with some appropriate material, removing the original structure, and obtaining in this way inverted opals.
Surface plasmon polariton (SPP) modes have attracted much interest in recent years. Although known and studied for over 100 years [1–3], the dream of confining light to dimensions smaller than its propagating wavelength has led the way towards technological possibilities not previously addressed, such as optical circuitry within ultra small computer processors [4, 5], or small biochemical sensors [6, 7]. Confinement of light to sub-wavelength dimensions is also a possibility when one considers the field aspects of the electromagnetic waves near surfaces (near-field phenomena). Add to this the interest in materials and structures exhibiting a negative refractive index for the purpose of increasing the resolution of optical microscopy [8], and it is no wonder that the area of electromagnetic (EM) propagation in sub-wavelength structures is enjoying a renewed interest. Whether the far-field aspects of periodic resonating metallo-dielectric structures are the true manifestations of a negative refractive index or simply a unique, but already known, near-field dispersion phenomenon may be debated [9]. Nonetheless, the near-field aspects of periodic sub-wavelength metallo-dielectric structures, and especially recent advances in nano-fabrication of structures at dimensions smaller than optical wavelengths, deserve a closer look.
Artificial dielectrics (ADs) constitute a class of man-made materials: the effective permittivity and permeability of a given dielectric material may be altered by imbedding metallic or semiconductive structures on scales smaller than the propagating wavelength. For example, one may alter the equivalent capacitance and inductance of microwave waveguides by the addition of a pattern of fine metallic features along the waveguide axis.
By
F. M. Izrailev, Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Apdo. Post. J-48, Puebla 72570, México,
N. M. Makarov, Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Priv. 17 Norte No. 3417, Col. San Miguel Hueyotlipan, Puebla 72050, México
In recent years, increasing attention has been paid to the so-called correlated disorder in low-dimensional disordered systems. Interest in this subject is mainly due to two reasons. First, it was found that specific correlations in a disordered potential can result in quite unexpected anomalous properties of scattering. Second, it was shown that such correlations can be relatively easily constructed experimentally, at least in the one-dimensional Anderson model and in Kronig–Penney models of various types. Therefore, it seems to be feasible to fabricate random structures with desired scattering properties, in particular when one needs to suppress or enhance the localization in given frequency windows for scattering electrons or electromagnetic waves. In addition, it was understood that, in many real systems, correlated disorder is an intrinsic property of the underlying structures. One of the most important examples is a DNA chain, for which strong correlations in the potential have been shown to manifest themselves in an anomalous conductance. Thus, the subject of correlated disorder is important both from the theoretical viewpoint, and for various applications in physics.
The key point of the theory of correlated disorder is that the localization length for eigenstates in one-dimensional models absorbs the main effect of correlations in disordered potentials. This fact has been known since the earliest analytical studies of transport in continuous random potentials. However, until recently the main interest was in delta-correlated potentials, or in potentials with a Gaussian-type of correlation.
Cloaking is the ability to make a region of space, and everything in it, invisible to an external observer. It has been the dream of fantasy writers for decades. In 2009, John Mullan [1] of The Guardian newspaper summarized the ten most important works that use the theme: The Invisible Man by H. G. Wells, The Republic by Plato, The Lord of the Rings by J. R. R. Tolkien, the Harry Potter books by J. K. Rowling, Theogony by Hesiod, Dr Faustus by Christopher Marlowe, The Tempest by William Shakespeare, The Voyage of the Dawn Treader by C. S. Lewis, The Emperor's New Clothes by Hans Christian Andersen, and The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams. A true cloak allows the clear observation of the space behind the cloaked region, and the cloaked region casts no shadow and produces no wavefront changes in the light that has passed through the cloaked region. It is not possible to build a perfect invisibility cloak, as was perceptively observed in the Star Trek series in which cloaked Romulan and Klingon spaceships could be detected by the subtle disturbances of space that the cloak produced.
Interest in making real cloaking devices can be traced to two seminal articles, one by John Pendry and his co-workers [2], and the other by Ulf Leonhardt [3]. Their approach can be called the transformational optics approach to cloaking, which will be discussed in more detail later.
By
Evgeny Popov, Aix-Marseille Université, CNRS, Unité Mixte de Recherche 6133, Domaine Universitaire de Saint Jerome, 13397 Marseille Cedex 20, France,
Nicolas Bonod, Aix-Marseille Université, CNRS, Unité Mixte de Recherche 6133, Domaine Universitaire de Saint Jerome, 13397 Marseille Cedex 20, France
A brief reminder of the history of grating anomalies and plasmon surface waves
The recent history of the research and development around plasmon surface waves that was initiated by the work published in Nature in 1998 by Ebbesen et al. [1] looks like a ten-fold compressed version of studies initiated more than a century ago by Robert Wood with his discovery of anomalies in the efficiency of metallic diffraction gratings, now known as Wood's anomalies [2]. In 1902, R. Wood wrote: “I was astounded to find that under certain conditions, the drop from maximum illumination to minimum, a drop certainly from 10 to 1, occurred within a range of wavelengths not greater than the distance between the sodium lines,” an observation that marked the discovery of grating anomalies.
The first period of the search for their explanation is marked by the attempt of Lord Rayleigh [3, 4] to link Wood's anomalies to the redistribution of the energy due to the passing-off (cut-off) of higher diffraction orders of the grating (transfer from propagating into evanescent type). As pointed out by Maystre [5], his prediction was all the more remarkable as the author first ignored the groove frequency of the grating used by Wood, and thus could not verify this assumption with experimental data.
In recent years it has emerged that planar metamaterials offer a vast range of custom-designed electromagnetic functionalities. The best known are wire grid polarizers, which are established standard components for microwaves, terahertz waves, and the far-infrared. They are expected to be of increasing importance also for the near-infrared [1] and visible light [2]. Equally well developed are frequency selective surfaces [3–6], which are used as filters in radar systems, antenna technology [7], broadband communications, and terahertz technology [8, 9]. However, the range of optical effects observable in planar metamaterials and the variety of potential applications have only become clear since metamaterials research took off in 2000 [10]. Wave plate [11, 12] as well as polarization rotator and circular polarizer [13–15] functionalities have been demonstrated in metamaterials of essentially zero thickness. Traditionally, such components are large as they rely on integrating weak effects over thick functional materials. Polarization rotation has also been seen at planar chiral diffraction gratings [16, 17] and thin layered stereometamaterials [18, 19]. Electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) [20–24] and high quality factor resonances [20] have been observed at planar structured interfaces. And finally, new fundamental electromagnetic effects leading to directionally asymmetric transmission of circularly [25–29] and linearly polarized waves have been discovered in planar metamaterials.
Planar metamaterials derive their properties from artificial structuring rather than atomic or molecular resonances, and therefore appropriately scaled versions of such structures will show similar properties for radio waves, microwaves, terahertz waves, and, to some extent, in the infrared and optical spectral regions where losses are becoming more important.
By
Peter B. Catrysse, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA,
Hocheol Shin, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA,
Shanhui Fan, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
All-angle negative refraction of electromagnetic waves [1, 2] has generated great interest because it provides the foundation for a wide range of new electromagnetic effects and applications, including subwavelength image formation [2] and a negative Doppler shift [1], as well as novel guiding, localization and nonlinear phenomena [3, 4]. There has been tremendous progress in achieving negative refraction in recent years using either dielectric photonic crystals [5–9] or metallic meta-materials [10–17]. For either approach, however, there is an underlying physical length scale that sets a fundamental limit [18]. Below such a length scale, the concept of an effective index no longer holds. For photonic crystals, it is the periodicity, which is smaller than but comparable to the operating wavelength of light [8]. For metallic meta-materials, it is the size of each individual resonant element. In the microwave wavelength range, constructing resonant elements that are far smaller than the operating wavelength is relatively straightforward. As one pushes towards shorter optical wavelengths, however, it becomes progressively more difficult to construct resonant elements at a deep subwavelength scale [15]. Moreover, in the optical wavelength range, the plasmonic effects of metals become prominent. The strong magnetic response of metallic structures, as observed in microwave and infrared wavelength ranges, may be fundamentally affected. It is therefore very desirable to accomplish all-angle negative refraction using structures that are flat at an atomic scale.
Negative refraction (NR) has been theoretically predicted [1, 2] and experimentally realized [3–7] in three types of materials. One is a material with a simultaneously negative permittivity and permeability [8–12], leading to a negative refractive index for the medium. The second consists of a photonic crystal (PhC) [13–21], which is a periodic arrangement of scatterers in which the group and phase velocities can be in different directions leading to NR. The third is the indefinite medium [22–28], whose permittivity and/or permeability tensor is an indefinite matrix. In all cases, the bulk properties of the medium, which is inherently inhomogeneous at a subwavelength scale, can be described as having an effective negative refractive index. The active research in these artificial materials has opened doors to a plethora of unusual electromagnetic properties and new applications such as a perfect lens [29], subwavelength imaging [30], cloaking [31], slow light, and optical data storage [32, 33], that cannot be obtained with naturally occurring materials. The holy grail of manufacturing these artificial photonic metamaterial structures is to manipulate light at the nanoscale level for optical information processing and high-resolution imaging.
In order to achieve NR, engineering the bulk electromagnetic properties is normally needed such that the group velocity and phase velocity be at an obtuse angle or even anti-parallel to each other. However, refraction is a surface phenomenon. A bulk-engineered material will have certain inherent surface properties. Negative refraction can be realized in positive index materials by special orientation or by engineering the interface properties.
By
A. I. Fernández-Domínguez, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, E-28049 Madrid, Spain,
F. García-Vidal, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, E-28049 Madrid, Spain,
L. Martín-Moreno, Universidad de Zaragoza, E-500009 Zaragoza, Spain
The ability to localize electromagnetic energy below the diffraction limit of classical optics featured by surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) (electromagnetic surface waves sustained at the interface between a conductor and a dielectric) is currently being exploited in numerous studies ranging from photonics, optoelectronics, and materials science to biological imaging and biomedicine [1]. While the basic physics of SPPs has been described in a number of seminal papers spanning the twentieth century [2, 3], the more recent emergence of powerful nanofabrication and characterization tools has catalyzed a vast interest in their study and exploitation. The dedicated field of plasmonics [4] brings together researchers and technologists from a variety of disciplines, with the common aim to take advantage of the subwavelength light confinement associated with the excitation of SPPs.
Most interest is focused on the optical regime, where SPPs are strongly confined to the respective metal/dielectric interface, i.e. where subwavelength mode localization is achieved in the direction perpendicular to the interface. These strongly confined SPPs occur at frequencies which are still an appreciable fraction of the intrinsic plasma frequency of the metal in question. In this regime, the motion of the conduction electrons at the interface is dephased with respect to the driving electromagnetic fields, leading to a reduction in both phase and group velocities of the SPP, and, therefore, to strong localization. A considerable fraction of the SPP field energy resides inside the conductor.
Nanotechnology has seen enormous progress in recent years, and various techniques are now available for the realization of ordered periodic arrays of particles with nanoscale dimensions. Electron-beam [1] and interference lithography [2], polymer-based nanofabrication [3], and self-assembly techniques [4] indeed enable producing ordered one-dimensional (1-D), two-dimensional (2-D), and even three-dimensional (3-D) arrays of metallic or dielectric nanoparticles with sizes much smaller than the wavelength of operation. As is well established in the field of optical metamaterials, such arrays may interact with light in anomalous and exotic ways, provided that their unit cells are sufficiently close to the individual or collective resonance of these arrays.
The electromagnetic response of optical metamaterials and metasurfaces is very distinct from that of gratings and photonic crystals. In photonic crystals, for which lattice periods are comparable to the wavelength of operation, it is possible to tailor the optical interaction operating near the Bragg collective resonances and Wood's anomalies associated with their period, whereas in optical metamaterials and metasurfaces, we operate near the plasmonic resonances of the individual inclusions, leading to the advantage of a much broader response in terms of the angle of incidence, and the absence of grating lobes in the visible angular spectrum. On the other hand, unlike photonic crystals, optical metamaterials and metasurfaces require a much smaller scale for their unit cells. Moreover, plasmonic materials, required to support the required resonances at the nanoscale, are usually characterized by intrinsic non-negligible loss and absorption.