We determine the lifetime of the surface plasmon in metallic nanoparticles
under various conditions, concentrating on the Landau damping, which is the
dominant mechanism for intermediate-size particles. Besides the main
contribution to the lifetime, which smoothly increases with the size of the
particle, our semiclassical evaluation yields an additional oscillating
component. For the case of noble metal particles embedded in a dielectric
medium, it is crucial to consider the details of the electronic confinement; we
show that in this case the lifetime is determined by the shape of the
self-consistent potential near the surface. Strong enough perturbations may
lead to the second collective excitation of the electronic system. We study its
lifetime, which is limited by two decay channels: Landau damping and
ionization. We determine the size dependence of both contributions and show
that the second collective excitation remains as a well defined resonance.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures; few minor change