Dynamical metasurfaces: electromagnetic properties and instabilities
Daigo Oue

TL;DR
This thesis explores electromagnetic phenomena in dynamical metasurfaces, revealing how surface instabilities and vacuum erenkov radiation can occur due to surface corrugation and motion, with implications for advanced electromagnetic control.
Contribution
It introduces the analysis of Casimir-induced instabilities and vacuum erenkov radiation in dynamical metasurfaces, highlighting novel effects of surface corrugation and motion.
Findings
Corrugation period exceeding a critical value causes structural instability due to Casimir effect.
Dynamical surface corrugation can produce erenkov radiation in vacuum when phase velocity exceeds light speed.
Surface instabilities depend on the interplay of surface tension and Casimir forces.
Abstract
In this thesis, I analyse the electromagnetic properties of dynamical metasurfaces and find two critical phenomena. The first is the Casimir-induced instability of a deformable metallic film. In general, two charge-neutral interfaces attract with or repel each other due to the contribution from the zero-point fluctuation of the electromagnetic field between them, namely, the Casimir effect. The effects of perturbative interface corrugation on the Casimir energy in the film system is studied by the proximity force approximation with dispersion correction. If the corrugation period exceeds a critical value, the Casimir effect dominates the surface tension and brings about structural instability. The second is \v{C}erenkov radiation in the vacuum from a time-varying, corrugated surface. Travelling faster than light brings about electromagnetic shock waves, \v{C}erenkov radiation. Since…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Orbital Angular Momentum in Optics
