Nanostratification of optical excitation in self-interacting 1D arrays
A. E. Kaplan, S. N. Volkov

TL;DR
This paper explores nanoscale optical excitations called locsitons in one-dimensional atomic arrays, revealing size-dependent resonances, hybrid modes, and nonlinear effects like bistability, challenging traditional uniform field assumptions.
Contribution
It advances the theory of locsitons in 1D arrays, identifying new hybrid excitation modes, size-related resonances, and nonlinear phenomena such as bistability and hysteresis.
Findings
Discovery of size-dependent resonances in finite arrays.
Identification of hybrid locsiton modes with unique properties.
Observation of optical bistability and hysteresis in nonlinear regimes.
Abstract
The major assumption of the Lorentz-Lorenz theory about uniformity of local fields and atomic polarization in dense material does not hold in finite groups of atoms, as we reported earlier [A. E. Kaplan and S. N. Volkov, Phys. Rev. Lett., v. 101, 133902 (2008)]. The uniformity is broken at sub-wavelength scale, where the system may exhibit strong stratification of local field and dipole polarization, with the strata period being much shorter than the incident wavelength. In this paper, we further develop and advance that theory for the most fundamental case of one-dimensional arrays, and study nanoscale excitation of so called "locsitons" and their standing waves (strata) that result in size-related resonances and related large field enhancement in finite arrays of atoms. The locsitons may have a whole spectrum of spatial frequencies, ranging from long waves, to an extent reminiscent of…
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