1,065 research outputs found

    Physical Insight into the 'Growing' Evanescent Fields of Double-Negative Metamaterial Lenses Using their Circuit Equivalence

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    Pendry in his paper [Phys. Rev. Lett., 85, 3966 (2000)] put forward an idea for a lens made of a lossless metamaterial slab with n = -1, that may provide focusing with resolution beyond the conventional limit. In his analysis, the evanescent wave inside such a lossless double-negative (DNG) slab is 'growing', and thus it 'compensates' the decaying exponential outside of it, providing the sub-wavelength lensing properties of this system. Here, we examine this debated issue of 'growing exponential' from an equivalent circuit viewpoint by analyzing a set of distributed-circuit elements representing evanescent wave interaction with a lossless slab of DNG medium. Our analysis shows that, under certain conditions, the current in series elements and the voltage at the element nodes may attain the dominant increasing due to the suitable resonance of the lossless circuit, providing an alternative physical explanation for 'growing exponential' in Pendry's lens and similar sub-wavelength imaging systems.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, submitted to IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagatio

    'Growing Evanescent Envelopes and Anomalous Tunneling' in Cascaded Sets of Frequency-Selective Surfaces in Their Stop Bands

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    The presence of wave tunneling and the 'growing evanescent envelope' for field distributions in suitably designed, periodically layered stacks of frequency selective surfaces (FSS) is discussed in this paper. Here it is shown that a setup completely different completely different from the Pendry's lens allows an analogous buildup of evanescently modulated waves. In particular, it is shown how an interface resonance phenomenon similar to the one present at the interface between metamaterials with oppositely signed constitutive parameters may be induced by a proper choice of the periodicities of the FSS stacks and the geometrical properties of these surfaces. The analysis is performed through an equivalent transmission-line approach, and some physical insights into this phenomenon are presented. Salient features, such as the complete wave tunneling through the pair of cascaded FSS, each operating at its bandgap, are presented and discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Physical review

    Do Cloaked Objects Really Scatter Less?

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    We discuss the global scattering response of invisibility cloaks over the entire frequency spectrum, from static to very high frequencies. Based on linearity, causality and energy conservation we show that the total extinction and scattering, integrated over all wavelengths, of any linear, passive, causal and non-diamagnetic cloak necessarily increases compared to the uncloaked case. In light of this general principle, we provide a quantitative measure to compare the global performance of different cloaking techniques and we discuss solutions to minimize the global scattering signature of an object using thin, superconducting shells. Our results provide important physical insights on how invisibility cloaks operate and affect the global scattering of an object, suggesting ways to defeat countermeasures aimed at detecting cloaked objects using short impinging pulses.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figure

    The Physics of Unbounded, Broadband Absorption/Gain Efficiency in Plasmonic Nanoparticles

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    Anomalous resonances in properly shaped plasmonic nanostructures can in principle lead to infinite absorption/gain efficiencies over broad bandwidths. By developing a closed-form analytical solution for the fields scattered by conjoined semicircles, we outline the fundamental physics behind these phenomena, associated with broadband adiabatic focusing of surface plasmons at the nanoscale. We are able to justify the apparent paradox of finite absorption/gain in the limit of infinitesimally small material loss/gain, and we explore the potential of these phenomena in nonlinear optics, spasing, energy-harvesting and sensing.Comment: 19 pages, 7figure
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