Hidden Modes in Open Disordered Media: Analytical, Numerical, and Experimental Results
Yury P. Bliokh, Valentin Freilikher, Z. Shi, A. Z. Genack, Franco Nori

TL;DR
This paper investigates the relationship between quasi-normal modes and transmission resonances in disordered media, revealing hidden modes with unique properties, supported by analytical, numerical, and experimental evidence.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of hidden QNMs in disordered systems, characterizes their properties, and demonstrates their existence through multiple methods, including microwave experiments.
Findings
Hidden modes have constant lifetimes over a range of disorder strengths.
The ratio of transmission peaks to QNMs approaches rac{rac{2}{5}} in weak disorder.
Hidden modes are observed in microwave experiments and relate to superradiant states.
Abstract
We explore numerically, analytically, and experimentally the relationship between quasi-normal modes (QNMs) and transmission resonance (TR) peaks in the transmission spectrum of one-dimensional (1D) and quasi-1D open disordered systems. It is shown that for weak disorder there exist two types of the eigenstates: ordinary QNMs which are associated with a TR, and hidden QNMs which do not exhibit peaks in transmission or within the sample. The distinctive feature of the hidden modes is that unlike ordinary ones, their lifetimes remain constant in a wide range of the strength of disorder. In this range, the averaged ratio of the number of transmission peaks to the number of QNMs , , is insensitive to the type and degree of disorder and is close to the value , which we derive analytically in the weak-scattering approximation.…
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