Theory and numerical modeling of photonic resonances: Quasinormal Modal Expansion -- Applications in Electromagnetics
Minh Duy Truong

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical and numerical framework for understanding and applying Quasi-Normal Mode (QNM) expansion in electromagnetics, especially for complex, unbounded, and dispersive resonators, enhancing modeling capabilities in nanophotonics.
Contribution
It extends the spectral theory of QNM expansion formalism and provides numerical examples for its application in electromagnetic resonator modeling.
Findings
QNM formalism effectively models electromagnetic resonances.
Numerical examples demonstrate the application of modal expansion.
Enhanced understanding of spectral properties of Maxwell operators.
Abstract
The idea of the modal expansion in electromagnetics is derived from the research on electromagnetic resonators, which play an essential role in developments in nanophotonics. All of the electromagnetic resonators share a common property: they possess a discrete set of special frequencies that show up as peaks in scattering spectra and are called resonant modes. These resonant modes are soon recognized to dictate the interaction between electromagnetic resonators and light. This leads to a hypothesis that the optical response of resonators is the synthesis of the excitation of each physical-resonance-state in the system: Under the excitation of external pulses, these resonant modes are initially loaded, then release their energy which contributes to the total optical responses of the resonators. These resonant modes with complex frequencies are known in the literature as the Quasi-Normal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic and Optical Devices · Plasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research · Photonic Crystals and Applications
