We study numerically interaction of spatially localized modes in strongly
scattering two-dimensional media. We move eigenvalues in the complex plane by
changing gradually the index of a single scatterer. When spatial and spectral
overlap is sufficient, localized states couple and avoided level crossing is
observed. We show that local manipulation of the disordered structure can
couple several localized states to form an extended chain of hybridized modes
crossing the entire sample, thus changing the nature of certain modes from
localized to extended in a nominally localized disordered system. We suggest
such a chain is the analog in 2D random systems of the 1D necklace states, the
occasional open channels predicted by J.B. Pendry through which the light can
sneak through an opaque medium.Comment: To be published in Optics Letter