Focusing: coming to the point in metamaterials
Sebastien Guenneau, Andre Diatta, Ross McPhedran

TL;DR
This paper investigates the limitations of geometrical optics in subwavelength focusing within metamaterials, analyzing various lenses like Maxwell fisheye and Veselago-Pendry slab, and reports on their resolution capabilities and image properties.
Contribution
It provides a detailed numerical analysis of subwavelength focusing in different metamaterial lenses, highlighting the limitations of perfect imaging and the importance of wavelength considerations.
Findings
Maxwell fisheye and silver slab lens achieve ~lambda/3 resolution
Multiple secondary images occur in Maxwell fisheye lens
Resolutions range from lambda/2 to lambda/4 depending on source orientation
Abstract
The point of the paper is to show some limitations of geometrical optics in the analysis of subwavelength focusing. We analyze the resolution of the image of a line source radiating in the Maxwell fisheye and the Veselago-Pendry slab lens. The former optical medium is deduced from the stereographic projection of a virtual sphere and displays a heterogeneous refractive index n(r) which is proportional to the inverse of 1+r^2. The latter is described by a homogeneous, but negative, refractive index. It has been suggested that the fisheye makes a perfect lens without negative refraction [Leonhardt, Philbin arxiv:0805.4778v2]. However, we point out that the definition of super-resolution in such a heterogeneous medium should be computed with respect to the wavelength in a homogenized medium, and it is perhaps more adequate to talk about a conjugate image rather than a perfect image (the…
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