From near-field to far-field: Radiative coupling of particle plasmon resonances in three-dimensional geometries

Author(s):  
Richard Taubert ◽  
Ralf Ameling ◽  
Thomas Weiss ◽  
Andre Christ ◽  
Harald Giessen
2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (04) ◽  
pp. 415-425 ◽  
Author(s):  
MIKKO J. HUTTUNEN ◽  
JOUNI MÄKITALO ◽  
MARTTI KAURANEN

We propose winged metal nanocone optical antennas for efficient coupling of far-field radiation into the near-field of sharp metal tips. Unlike normal sharp metal tips, the winged nanocones require no oscillating field along the tip axis for the excitation of the tips. We calculate extinction spectra and local-field enhancements for single and winged gold nanocones and show that the field enhancements in the tips of the winged cones are due to a combination of particle plasmon resonances and a lightning-rod effect. We also propose that the winged nanocones could be used for optical far-field background suppression for tip-enhanced microscopy.


1994 ◽  
Vol 276 ◽  
pp. 211-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yitao Yao ◽  
Marshall P. Tulin ◽  
Ali R. Kolaini

In view of several practical ramifications of this problem, computational-analytical techniques for calculating waves induced by heaving arbitrary bodies in narrow tanks have been developed, including nonlinear wave groups produced near tank resonance. These feature computational near-field solutions matched with appropriate far-field solutions. In the linear case, the far field is provided by linear mode superposition. In the nonlinear case, the far field is described by a suitable nonlinear evolution equation of the cubic Schrödinger type. Matching techniques were developed. Calculations were successfully carried out and the results confirm the important effect of tank walls on added mass and damping.Results of computations have been compared with some data obtained with a conical wavemaker in a narrow tank. Pronounced nonlinear wave groups were obtained near resonance, and these are well reproduced in some detail by the nonlinear theory and computations, without considering any effects of dissipation.The related problem of resonant wave groups produced by a segmented paddle wavemaker has also been treated by analysis and subject to computation, with good general agreement with past experiments. The technique features matching near- and far-field computations using energy considerations.


2012 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Barchiesi ◽  
S. Kessentini

The fabrication process of nanodevices is continually improved. However, most of the nanodevices, such as biosensors present rough surfaces with mean roughness of some nanometers even if the deposition rate of material is more controlled. The effect of roughness on performance of biosensors was fully addressed for plane biosensors and gratings, but rarely addressed for biosensors based on Local Plasmon Resonance. The purpose of this paper is to evaluate numerically the influence of nanometric roughness on the efficiency of a dimer nano-biosensor (two levels of roughness are considered). Therefore, we propose a general numerical method, that can be applied to any other nanometric shape, to take into account the roughness in a three dimensional model. The study focuses on both the far-field, which corresponds to the experimental detected data, and the near-field, responsible for exciting and then detecting biological molecules. The results suggest that the biosensor efficiency is highly sensitive to the surface roughness. The roughness can produce important shifts of the extinction efficiency peak and a decrease of its amplitude resulting from changes in the distribution of near-field and absorbed electric field intensities.


1979 ◽  
Vol 95 (2) ◽  
pp. 223-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. S. Cramer

The far field of a lifting three-dimensional wing in transonic flow is analysed. The boundary-value problem governing the flow far from the wing is derived by the method of matched asymptotic expansions. The main result is to show that corrections which are second order in the near field make a first-order contribution to the far field. The present study corrects and simplifies the work of Cheng & Hafez (1975) and Barnwell (1975).


2016 ◽  
Vol 139 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
X. D. Song ◽  
Q. Li ◽  
D. J. Wu

Bridge noise and rail noise induced by passing trains should be included while estimating low- and medium-frequency (20–1000 Hz) noise in railway viaducts. However, the prediction of bridge noise and rail noise using a three-dimensional (3D) acoustic model is not efficient, especially for far-field points. In this study, a combined 2.5-dimensional (2.5D) and two-dimensional (2D) method is proposed to predict bridge noise and rail noise in both the near- and far-field. First, the near-field noise is obtained by combining the 2.5D acoustic model and a 3D vehicle–track–bridge interaction analysis. Then, the 2D method is used to estimate the attenuation of bridge noise and rail noise in the far-field, and the accuracy is validated through comparison with the 2.5D method. Third, the near-field points are treated as reference sources, and the noise at far-field points is predicted by combining the 2.5D and 2D methods. Finally, the proposed method is used to predict the bridge noise and rail noise for a box girder and a U-shaped girder. The spatial distribution of the bridge noise and rail noise is investigated. Generally, the rail noise is dominant above the bridge, and the bridge noise has a larger contribution to the total noise beneath the bridge. The rail noise from the U-shaped girder is much smaller than that from the box girder due to the shielding effect of the webs.


Geophysics ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 255-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. B. Boschetto ◽  
G. W. Hohmann

Modeling the controlled‐source audiofrequency magnetotelluric (CSAMT) responses of simple three‐dimensional (3-D) structures due to a grounded electric bipole confirms that the CSAMT technique accurately simulates plane‐wave results in the far‐field zone of the transmitter. However, at receiver sites located above large conductive or resistive bodies, the presence of the inhomogeneity extends or reduces, respectively, the frequency range of the far‐field zone. Measurements made on the surface beyond a large 3-D body display a small but spatially extensive effect due to decay of the artificial primary field. Situating a 3-D inhomogeneity beneath the source permits an evaluation of “source overprint” effects. When such a body is resistive, a slight shift in the near‐field response to higher frequencies occurs. When a body below the transmitter is conductive, it is possible to make far‐field measurements closer to the transmitter or lower in frequency. However, as the size of the conductor and its secondary‐field response increases, large transition‐zone responses distort the data. For both a plane‐wave source and a finite source, current channeling into a 3-D conductor from conductive overburden enhances the response of a target. The modeled response of a dike‐like conductor shows no better results for either the broadside or collinear configuration. The location and extent of such a body are better defined when measuring the electric field perpendicular to the strike of the prism, but resistivity estimates are better when using the electric field parallel to the strike of the prism, irrespective of transmitter orientation. Models designed from data collected at Marionoak, Tasmania, yield results which indicate that the thin, vertical graphitic unit intersected by drilling is detectable by the CSAMT method, but probably is not the sole source of the large anomaly seen in the CSAMT data.


Author(s):  
D. C. Hong ◽  
J. G. Kim ◽  
K. H. Song ◽  
H. K. Lee

When a ship advances in a seaway, it undergoes 6-degree-of-freedom motion. The ship motions and wave loads are very important from operability and survivability points of view. The resistance increase due to waves is also important from the economic point of view. Although the accurate prediction of these seakeeping characteristics should be done using the unsteady CFD computations, the analytical method based on the linear potential flow theory have been widely used to evaluate them at the early design stage since the latter does not require large computing resources. In the present paper, the added resistance of a ship advancing in waves was calculated using both Maruo’s far-field formula and the near-field method. The radiation-diffraction potential over the wetted surface of the ship has been obtained using the three-dimensional frequency-domain forward-speed free-surface Green function (Brard 1948) and the forward-speed Green integral equation (Hong 2000). Numerical solutions are obtained by making use of the 9-node second-order inner collocation boundary element method (Hong et al. 2014b). In the present paper, Maruo’s far-field formula was combined with the exact three-dimensional Kochin function so that the added resistance thereby obtained could show good comparison with experimental results over the entire wave range including the short wave range. The near-field added resistance is the time mean value of the 2nd-order forces acting on the advancing ship in waves. The time-mean hydrodynamic force, obtained by using direct integration of the hydrodynamic pressure due to the sum of the unsteady potential and steady potential approximated by the double-body potential over the wetted surface of the ship, was also presented. Comparison of the present far-field and simplified near-field numerical values and the experimental values reported by Journee (1992) of the added resistance for the Wigley ship models I and II has been made in order to find appropriate numerical values of the far-field added resistance over the entire frequency range of interest.


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