English

Exotic Grazing Resonances in Nanowires

Optics 2009-05-12 v1

Abstract

We investigate electromagnetic scattering from nanoscale wires and reveal for the first time, the emergence of a family of exotic resonances, or enhanced fields, for source waves close to grazing incidence. These grazing resonances can have a much higher Q factor, broader bandwidth, and are much less susceptible to material losses than the well known surface plasmon resonances found in metal nanowires. Contrary to surface plasmon resonances however, these grazing resonances can be excited in both dielectric and metallic nanowires and are insensitive to the polarization state of the incident wave. This peculiar resonance effect originates from the excitation of long range guided surface waves through the interplay of coherently scattered continuum modes coupled with the azimuthal first order propagating mode of the cylindrical nanowire. The nanowire resonance phenomenon revealed here can be utilized in broad scientific areas, including: metamaterial designs, nanophotonic integration, nanoantennas, and nanosensors.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0905.1357,
  title  = {Exotic Grazing Resonances in Nanowires},
  author = {Simin Feng and Klaus Halterman},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0905.1357},
  year   = {2009}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:59:54.615Z