2 research outputs found
Quantum Statistics of Surface Plasmon Polaritons in Metallic Stripe Waveguides
Heralded single surface plasmon polaritons are excited
using photons
generated via spontaneous parametric down conversion. The mean excitation
rates, intensity correlations, and Fock state populations are studied.
The observed dependence of the second-order coherence in our experiment
is consistent with a linear uncorrelated Markovian environment in
the quantum regime. Our results provide important information about
the effect of loss for assessing the potential of plasmonic waveguides
for future nanophotonic circuitry in the quantum regime
Unidirectional Side Scattering of Light by a Single-Element Nanoantenna
Unidirectional side scattering of
light by a single-element plasmonic
nanoantenna is demonstrated using full-field simulations and back
focal plane measurements. We show that the phase and amplitude matching
that occurs at the Fano interference between two localized surface
plasmon modes in a V-shaped nanoparticle lies at the origin of this
effect. A detailed analysis of the V-antenna modeled as a system of
two coherent point-dipole sources elucidates the mechanisms that give
rise to a tunable experimental directivity as large as 15 dB. The
understanding of Fano-based directional scattering opens a way to
develop new directional optical antennas for subwavelength color routing
and self-referenced directional sensing. In addition, the directionality
of these nanoantennas can increase the detection efficiency of fluorescence
and surface enhanced Raman scattering