1 research outputs found
Near-Field Mapping of Optical Fabry–Perot Modes in All-Dielectric Nanoantennas
Subwavelength
optical resonators and scatterers are dramatically
expanding the toolset of the optical sciences and photonics engineering.
By offering the opportunity to control and shape light waves in nanoscale
volumes, recent developments using high-refractive-index dielectric
scatterers gave rise to efficient flat-optical components such as
lenses, polarizers, phase plates, color routers, and nonlinear elements
with a subwavelength thickness. In this work, we take a deeper look
into the unique interaction of light with rod-shaped amorphous silicon
scatterers by tapping into their resonant modes with a localized subwavelength
light sourceî—¸an aperture scanning near-field probe. Our experimental
configuration essentially constitutes a dielectric antenna that is
locally driven by the aperture probe. We show how leaky transverse
electric and magnetic modes can selectively be excited and form specific
near-field distribution depending on wavelength and antenna dimensions.
The probe’s transmittance is furthermore enhanced upon coupling
to the Fabry–Perot cavity modes, revealing all-dielectric nanorods
as efficient transmitter antennas for the radiation of subwavelength
emitters, in addition to constituting an elementary building block
for all-dielectric metasurfaces and flat optics