680 research outputs found
Surface Plasmons and Topological Insulators
We study surface plasmons localized on interfaces between topologically
trivial and topologically non-trivial time reversal invariant materials in
three dimensions. For the interface between a metal and a topological insulator
the magnetic polarization of the surface plasmon is rotated out of the plane of
the interface; this effect should be experimentally observable by exciting the
surface plasmon with polarized light. More interestingly, we argue that the
same effect also is realized on the interface between vacuum and a doped
topological insulator with non-vanishing bulk carrier density.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure; v2: typo in eq. (27) correcte
Spaser Action, Loss Compensation, and Stability in Plasmonic Systems with Gain
We demonstrate that the conditions of spaser generation and the full loss
compensation in a resonant plasmonic-gain medium (metamaterial) are identical.
Consequently, attempting the full compensation or overcompensation of losses by
gain will lead to instability and a transition to a spaser state. This will
limit (clamp) the inversion and lead to the limitation on the maximum loss
compensation achievable. The criterion of the loss overcompensation, leading to
the instability and spasing, is given in a analytical and universal
(independent from system's geometry) form.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Reply to "Can gravitational dynamics be obtained by diffeomorphism invariance of action?"
In a previous work we showed that, in a suitable setting, one can use
diffeomorphism invariance in order to derive gravitational field equations from
boundary terms of the gravitational action. Standing by our results we reply
here to a recent comment questioning their validity.Comment: Accepted for publication in PR
Ad- and desorption of Rb atoms on a gold nanofilm measured by surface plasmon polaritons
Hybrid quantum systems made of cold atoms near nanostructured surfaces are
expected to open up new opportunities for the construction of quantum sensors
and for quantum information. For the design of such tailored quantum systems
the interaction of alkali atoms with dielectric and metallic surfaces is
crucial and required to be understood in detail. Here, we present real-time
measurements of the adsorption and desorption of Rubidium atoms on gold
nanofilms. Surface plasmon polaritons (SPP) are excited at the gold surface and
detected in a phase sensitive way. From the temporal change of the SPP phase
the Rubidium coverage of the gold film is deduced with a sensitivity of better
than 0.3 % of a monolayer. By comparing the experimental data with a Langmuir
type adsorption model we obtain the thermal desorption rate and the sticking
probability. In addition, also laser-induced desorption is observed and
quantified.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Performance analysis of higher mode spoof surface plasmon polariton for terahertz sensing
We investigated the spoof surface plasmon polaritons (SSPPs) on 1D grooved metal surface for terahertz sensing of refractive index of the filling analyte through a prism-coupling attenuated total reflection setup. From the dispersion relation analysis and the finite element method-based simulation, we revealed that the dispersion curve of SSPP got suppressed as the filling refractive index increased, which cause the coupling resonance frequency redshifting in the reflection spectrum. The simulated results for testing various refractive indexes demonstrated that the incident angle of terahertz radiation has a great effect on the performance of sensing. Smaller incident angle will result in a higher sensitive sensing with a narrower detection range. In the meanwhile, the higher order mode SSPP-based sensing has a higher sensitivity with a narrower detection range. The maximum sensitivity is 2.57 THz/RIU for the second-order mode sensing at 45° internal incident angle. The proposed SSPP-based method has great potential for high sensitive terahertz sensing
Surface plasmon resonance imaging detection of silver nanoparticle-tagged immunoglobulin
This article is available open access through the publisher’s website at the link below. Copyright @ 2011 The Royal Society.The detection sensitivity of silver nanoparticle (AgNP)-tagged goat immunoglobulin G (gIgG) microarrays was investigated by studying surface plasmon resonance (SPR) images captured in the visible wavelength range with the help of a Kretchmann-configured optical coupling set-up. The functionalization of anti-gIgG molecules on the AgNP surface was studied using transmission electron microscopy, photon correlation measurements and UV–visible absorption spectroscopy. A value of 1.3 × 107 M−1 was obtained for the antibody–antigen binding constant by monitoring the binding events at a particular resonance wavelength. The detection limit of this SPR imaging instrument is 6.66 nM of gIgG achieved through signal enhancement by a factor of larger than 4 owing to nanoparticle tagging with the antibody.The European Commissio
Emission of light through thin silver films via near-field coupling to surface plasmon polaritons
Copyright © 2006 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in Applied Physics Letters 88 (2006) and may be found at http://link.aip.org/link/?APPLAB/88/051109/1We show that the emission of light from a dye layer through an adjacent thin silver film is maximal for a silver thickness of approximately 50 nm. This effect is explained as the result of competition between enhancement of the electric field at the metal surface due to the excitation of a surface plasmon-polariton mode, the amount of power coupled to the surface plasmon-polariton mode, and the attenuation of the field transmitted through the silver, all three of which vary with metal thickness. We indicate how these findings may be of relevance in the design of some surface plasmon-polariton-based fluorescence biosensing schemes
Otto-coupled surface plasmons in a liquid crystal cell
Copyright © 2009 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in Applied Physics Letters 95 (2009) and may be found at http://link.aip.org/link/?APPLAB/95/171102/1Surface plasmons on silver in the visible domain are excited using a several micron thick layer of liquid crystal as the optical tunnel barrier. This thickness is possible when the orientation of the director in the liquid crystal varies from homeotropic at the entrance surface (against the coupling prism) to homogeneous on the thick silver layer at the other side of the cell, with the director tilting in a plane normal to the plane of incidence. This geometry also allows the excitation of guided modes, which mixes with the surface plasmon resonance. Both types of mode are then explored as a function of applied voltage
Lucky Cars and the Quicksort Algorithm
Quicksort is a classical divide-and-conquer sorting algorithm. It is a
comparison sort that makes an average of comparisons on an
array of size ordered uniformly at random, where is the th harmonic number. Therefore, it makes
comparisons to sort all possible orderings of
the array. In this article, we prove that this count also enumerates the
parking preference lists of cars parking on a one-way street with
parking spots resulting in exactly lucky cars (i.e., cars that park in
their preferred spot). For , both counts satisfy the second order
recurrence relation with .Comment: 8 pages, and 2 figures, to appear in The American Mathematical
Monthl
TransverseDiff gravity is to scalar-tensor as unimodular gravity is to General Relativity
Transverse Diffeomorphism (TDiff) theories are well-motivated theories of
gravity from the quantum perspective, which are based upon a gauge symmetry
principle. The main contribution of this work is to firmly establish a
correspondence between TransverseDiff and the better-known scalar-tensor
gravity --- in its more general form ---, a relation which is completely
analogous to that between unimodular gravity and General Relativity. We then
comment on observational aspects of TDiff. In connection with this proof, we
derive a very general rule that determines under what conditions the procedure
of fixing a gauge symmetry can be equivalently applied before the variational
principle leading to the equations of motion, as opposed to the standard
procedure, which takes place afterwards; this rule applies to gauge-fixing
terms without derivatives.Comment: 10 pages; amsart style; v3: version as appeared in JCAP, redaction
improve
- …