scholarly journals Whispering gallery waves in a neighborhood of a higher order zero of the curvature of the boundary

1989 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 605-629 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gen Nakamura ◽  
Yoshihiro Shibata ◽  
Kazumi Tanuma
2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dalton S. Rosario ◽  
Nasser M. Nasrabadi

1999 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 527-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. RONDOGIANNIS ◽  
W. W. WADGE

In this paper we demonstrate that a broad class of higher-order functional programs can be transformed into semantically equivalent multidimensional intensional programs that contain only nullary variable definitions. The proposed algorithm systematically eliminates user-defined functions from the source program, by appropriately introducing context manipulation (i.e. intensional) operators. The transformation takes place in M steps, where M is the order of the initial functional program. During each step the order of the program is reduced by one, and the final outcome of the algorithm is an M-dimensional intensional program of order zero. As the resulting intensional code can be executed in a purely tagged-dataflow way, the proposed approach offers a promising new technique for the implementation of higher-order functional languages.


2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (8) ◽  
pp. 2231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rakesh Ranjan Kumar ◽  
Yi Wang ◽  
Yaojing Zhang ◽  
Hon Ki Tsang

Nanophotonics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksandr Yu. Frolov ◽  
Joris Van de Vondel ◽  
Vladimir I. Panov ◽  
Pol Van Dorpe ◽  
Andrey A. Fedyanin ◽  
...  

Abstract All-dielectric nanoantennas, consisting of high refractive index semiconductor material, are drawing a great deal of attention in nanophotonics. Owing to their ability to manipulate efficiently the flow of light within sub-wavelength volumes, they have become the building blocks of a wide range of new photonic metamaterials and devices. The interaction of the antenna with light is largely governed by its size, geometry, and the symmetry of the multitude of optical cavity modes it supports. Already for simple antenna shapes, unraveling the full modal spectrum using conventional far-field techniques is nearly impossible due to the spatial and spectral overlap of the modes and their symmetry mismatch with incident radiation fields. This limitation can be circumvented by using localized excitation of the antenna. Here, we report on the experimental near-field probing of optical higher order cavity modes (CMs) and whispering gallery modes (WGMs) in amorphous silicon nanoantennas with simple, but fundamental, geometrical shapes of decreasing rotational symmetry: a disk, square, and triangle. Tapping into the near-field using an aperture type scanning near-field optical microscope (SNOM) opens a window on a rich variety of optical patterns resulting from the local excitation of antenna modes of different order with even and odd parity. Numerical analysis of the antenna and SNOM probe interaction shows how the near-field patterns reveal the node positions of – and allows us to distinguish between – cavity and whispering gallery modes. As such, this study contributes to a richer and deeper characterization of the structure of light in confined nanosystems, and their impact on the structuring of the light fields they generate.


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