Comprehensive Microscopic Theory for Coupling of Longitudinal--Transverse Fields and Individual--Collective Excitations
Tomohiro Yokoyama, Masayuki Iio, Takashi Kinoshita, Takeshi Inaoka,, and Hajime Ishihara

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive microscopic theory describing how plasmons and single-particle excitations in nanostructures coherently couple via both longitudinal and transverse electromagnetic fields, filling a gap in existing models.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent theoretical framework that explicitly separates and couples longitudinal and transverse fields in plasmonic systems, advancing understanding of their interactions.
Findings
Framework describes plasmon-SPE coupling via L and T fields
Eigenvalues correspond to system excitation poles
Enables exploration of mechanisms for enhanced coupling
Abstract
A plasmon is a collective excitation of electrons due to the Coulomb interaction. Both plasmons and single-particle excitations (SPEs) are eigenstates of bulk metallic systems and they are orthogonal to each other. However, in non-translationally symmetric systems such as nanostructures, plasmons and SPEs coherently interact. It has been well discussed that the plasmons and SPEs, respectively, can couple with transverse (T) electric field in such systems, and also that they are coupled with each other via longitudinal (L) field. However, there has been a missing link in the previous studies: the coherent coupling between the plasmons and SPEs mediated by the T field. Herein, we develop a theoretical framework to describe the self-consistent relationship between plasmons and SPEs through both the L and T fields. The excitations are described in terms of the charge and current densities…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermal Radiation and Cooling Technologies · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies
