Fano resonances in nanoscale structures
Andrey E. Miroshnichenko, Sergej Flach, and Yuri S. Kivshar

TL;DR
This paper reviews the role of Fano resonances in nanoscale structures, explaining their physical basis, unique asymmetric profiles, and significance in enhancing device efficiency through resonant scattering phenomena.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Fano resonances underpin various resonant scattering effects in nanoscale systems, unifying phenomena like transmission enhancement and suppression.
Findings
Fano resonances produce asymmetric transmission profiles.
Resonant reflection and transmission are explained by Fano interference.
A simple model illustrates the universality of Fano resonances in complex systems.
Abstract
Nowadays nanotechnology allows to scale-down various important devices (sensors, chips, fibres, etc), and, thus, opens up new horizon for their applications. Nevertheless, the efficiency most of them is still based on the fundamental physical phenomena, such as resonances. Thus, the understanding of the resonance phenomena will be beneficial. One of the well-known examples is the resonant enhancement of the transmission known as Breit-Wigner resonances, which can be described by a Lorentzian function. But, in many physical systems the scattering of waves involves propagation along different paths, and, as a consequence, results in interference phenomena, where constructive interference corresponds to resonant enhancement and destructive interference to resonant suppression of the transmission. Recently, a variety of experimental and theoretical work has revealed such patterns in…
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