913 research outputs found
Enhanced Transmission and Reflection of Femtosecond Pulses by a Single Slit
We show that a physical mechanism responsible for the enhanced transmission
and reflection of femtosecond pulses by a single subwavelength nanoslit in a
thick metallic film is the Fabry-Perot-like resonant excitation of stationary,
quasistationary and nonstationary waves inside the slit, which leads to the
field enhancement inside and around the slit. The mechanism is universal for
any pulse-scatter system, which supports the stationary resonances. We point
out that there is a pulse duration limit below which the slit does not support
the intraslit resonance.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Near-field diffraction of fs and sub-fs pulses: super-resolutions of NSOM in space and time
The near-field diffraction of fs and sub-fs light pulses by nm-size slit-type
apertures and its implication for near-field scanning optical microscopy (NSOM)
is analyzed. The amplitude distributions of the diffracted wave-packets having
the central wavelengths in the visible spectral region are found by using the
Neerhoff and Mur coupled integral equations, which are solved numerically for
each Fourier's component of the wave-packet. In the case of fs pulses, the
duration and transverse dimensions of the diffracted pulse remain practically
the same as that of the input pulse. This demonstrates feasibility of the NSOM
in which a fs pulse is used to provide the fs temporal resolution together with
nm-scale spatial resolution. In the sub-fs domain, the Fourier spectrum of the
transmitted pulse experiences a considerable narrowing that leads to the
increase of the pulse duration in a few times. This imposes a limit on the
simultaneous resolutions in time and space.Comment: 5 figure
The optimal form of the scanning near-field optical microscopy probe
A theoretical approach to determine the optimal form of the near-field
optical microscope probe is proposed. An analytical expression of the optimal
probe form with subwavelength aperture has been obtained. The advantages of the
probe with the optimal form are illustrated using numerical calculations. The
conducted calculations show 10 times greater light throughput and the reception
possibility of the more compactly localized light at the output probe aperture
which could indicate better spatial resolution of the optical images in
near-field optical technique using optimal probe.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Extension of Bethe's diffraction model to conical Geometry: application to near field optics
The generality of the Bethe's two dipole model for light diffraction through
a subwavelength aperture in a conducting plane is studied in the radiation zone
for coated conical fiber tips as those used in near field scanning optical
microscopy. In order to describe the angular radiated power of the tip
theoretically, we present a simple, analytical model for small apertures
(radius < 40 nm) based on a multipole expansion. Our model is able to reproduce
the available experimental results. It proves relatively insensitive to cone
angle and aperture radius and contains, as a first approximation, the empirical
two-dipole model proposed earlier
Enhanced transmission versus localization of a light pulse by a subwavelength metal slit: Can the pulse have both characteristics?
The existence of resonant enhanced transmission and collimation of light
waves by subwavelength slits in metal films [for example, see T.W. Ebbesen et
al., Nature (London) 391, 667 (1998) and H.J. Lezec et al., Science, 297, 820
(2002)] leads to the basic question: Can a light be enhanced and simultaneously
localized in space and time by a subwavelength slit? To address this question,
the spatial distribution of the energy flux of an ultrashort (femtosecond)
wave-packet diffracted by a subwavelength (nanometer-size) slit was analyzed by
using the conventional approach based on the Neerhoff and Mur solution of
Maxwell's equations. The results show that a light can be enhanced by orders of
magnitude and simultaneously localized in the near-field diffraction zone at
the nm- and fs-scales. Possible applications in nanophotonics are discussed.Comment: 5 figure
Enhanced Transmission of Light and Particle Waves through Subwavelength Nanoapertures by Far-Field Interference
Subwavelength aperture arrays in thin metal films can enable enhanced
transmission of light and matter (atom) waves. The phenomenon relies on
resonant excitation and interference of the plasmon or matter waves on the
metal surface. We show a new mechanism that could provide a great resonant and
nonresonant transmission enhancement of the light or de Broglie particle waves
passed through the apertures not by the surface waves, but by the constructive
interference of diffracted waves (beams generated by the apertures) at the
detector placed in the far-field zone. In contrast to other models, the
mechanism depends neither on the nature (light or matter) of the beams
(continuous waves or pulses) nor on material and shape of the multiple-beam
source (arrays of 1-D and 2-D subwavelength apertures, fibers, dipoles or
atoms). The Wood anomalies in transmission spectra of gratings, a long standing
problem in optics, follow naturally from the interference properties of our
model. The new point is the prediction of the Wood anomaly in a classical
Young-type two-source system. The new mechanism could be interpreted as a
non-quantum analog of the superradiance emission of a subwavelength ensemble of
atoms (the light power and energy scales as the number of light-sources
squared, regardless of periodicity) predicted by the well-known Dicke quantum
model.Comment: Revised version of MS presented at the Nanoelectronic Devices for
Defense and Security (NANO-DDS) Conference, 18-21 June, 2007, Washington, US
Optical control of photon tunneling through an array of nanometer scale cylindrical channels
We report first observation of photon tunneling gated by light at a different
wavelength in an artificially created array of nanometer scale cylindrical
channels in a thick gold film. Polarization properties of gated light provide
strong proof of the enhanced nonlinear optical mixing in nanometric channels
involved in the process. This suggests the possibility of building a new class
of "gated" photon tunneling devices for massive parallel all-optical signal and
image processing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Near-field spectroscopy of a gated electron gas: a direct evidence for electrons localization
The near-field photoluminescence of a gated two-dimensional electron gas is
measured. We use the negatively charged exciton, formed by binding of an
electron to a photo-excited electron-hole pair, as an indicator for the local
presence of charge. Large spatial fluctuations in the luminescence intensity of
the negatively charged exciton are observed. These fluctuations are shown to be
due to electrons localized in the random potential of the remote ionized
donors. We use these fluctuations to image the electrons and donors
distribution in the plane.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, to be published in PR
Anisotropy and periodicity in the density distribution of electrons in a quantum-well
We use low temperature near-field optical spectroscopy to image the electron
density distribution in the plane of a high mobility GaAs quantum well. We find
that the electrons are not randomly distributed in the plane, but rather form
narrow stripes (width smaller than 150 nm) of higher electron density. The
stripes are oriented along the [1-10 ] crystal direction, and are arranged in a
quasi-periodic structure. We show that elongated structural mounds, which are
intrinsic to molecular beam epitaxy, are responsible for the creation of this
electron density texture.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Diffraction by a small aperture in conical geometry: Application to metal coated tips used in near-field scanning optical microscopy
Light diffraction through a subwavelength aperture located at the apex of a
metallic screen with conical geometry is investigated theoretically. A method
based on a multipole field expansion is developed to solve Maxwell's equations
analytically using boundary conditions adapted both for the conical geometry
and for the finite conductivity of a real metal. The topological properties of
the diffracted field are discussed in detail and compared to those of the field
diffracted through a small aperture in a flat screen, i. e. the Bethe problem.
The model is applied to coated, conically tapered optical fiber tips that are
used in Near-Field Scanning Optical Microscopy. It is demonstrated that such
tips behave over a large portion of space like a simple combination of two
effective dipoles located in the apex plane (an electric dipole and a magnetic
dipole parallel to the incident fields at the apex) whose exact expressions are
determined. However, the large "backward" emission in the P plane - a salient
experimental fact that remained unexplained so far - is recovered in our
analysis which goes beyond the two-dipole approximation.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, published in PRE in 200
- …