0000000000231148

AUTHOR

Patrick C. Chaumet

Evanescent light scattering: The validity of the dipole approximation

In near-field optics the very concept of dipole is often used to represent either an elementary source or a scattering center. The most simple and widely used example is that of a small spherical particle whose polarizability is assumed to conform to the Clausius-Mossotti relation. While in conventional, far-field optics this approximation is known to be valid provided that the object is much smaller than the wavelength, its extension to near-field optics requires some precautions. Indeed, in the case of the scattering, by a spherical object, of an evanescent field generated, for instance, by total internal reflection or by a surface polariton, the strong-field gradient may increase the con…

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Field propagator of a dressed junction: Fluorescence lifetime calculations in a confined geometry

The study of the fluorescence phenomenon by near-field optical techniques requires one to describe precisely the spontaneous emission change occurring when the fluorescing particle is placed in a complex optical environment. For this purpose, the field susceptibility (also called the field propagator) of a planar junction formed by a cavity bounded by two semi-infinite bodies with arbitrary optical constant is derived within the framework of linear-response theory. The field propagator associated with the junction is then modified in a self-consistent manner to account for the presence of any arbitrary object inside the junction. As a first illustration the alteration of the fluorescence li…

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