Ewold Vehagen's research while affiliated with AMOLF and other places

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Publications (1)


Controlling Nanoantenna Polarizability through Backaction via a Single Cavity Mode
  • Article

December 2017

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17 Reads

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13 Citations

Physical Review Letters

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Hugo M. Doeleman

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Ewold Vehagen

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A. Femius Koenderink

The polarizability $\alpha$ determines the absorption, extinction and scattering by small particles. Beyond being purely set by scatterer size and material, in fact polarizability can be affected by backaction: the influence of the photonic environment on the scatterer. As such, controlling the strength of backaction provides a tool to tailor the (radiative) properties of nanoparticles. Here, we control the backaction between broadband scatterers and a single mode of a high-quality cavity. We demonstrate that backaction from a microtoroid ring resonator significantly alters the polarizability of an array of nanorods: the polarizability is renormalized as fields scattered from -- and returning to -- the nanorods via the ring resonator depolarize the rods. Moreover, we show that it is possible to control the strength of the backaction by exploiting the diffractive properties of the array. This perturbation of a strong scatterer by a nearby cavity has important implications for hybrid plasmonic-photonic resonators and the understanding of coupled optical resonators in general.

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Citations (1)


... However, it turns out that one can make a GNP transparent to light by adding a single atom [4][5][6]. The underlying mechanism of this intriguing phenomenon is the interference between the fields scattered by two near-field coupled oscillators [6][7][8][9]. Here, it is helpful to recall that the cross section of a two-level atom with transition at wavelength λ can be as large as σ 0 ¼ 3λ 2 =2π [10], which can be comparable to the extinction cross section and the physical size of a nanoparticle [3]. ...

Reference:

Partial Cloaking of a Gold Particle by a Single Molecule
Controlling Nanoantenna Polarizability through Backaction via a Single Cavity Mode
  • Citing Article
  • December 2017

Physical Review Letters