Superradiant Broadband Magneto-electric Arrays Empowered by Meta-learning
Konstantin Grotov, Anna Mikhailovskaya, Dmytro Vovchuk, Dmitry, Dobrykh, Carsten Rockstuhl, and Pavel Ginzburg

TL;DR
This paper uses genetic algorithms to design superradiant resonator arrays that surpass traditional electromagnetic scattering bounds, achieving high cross-sections and bandwidths through optimized constructive interference.
Contribution
It introduces a novel genetic optimization approach to design resonator arrays that exceed existing scattering bounds, including the superradiant empirical limit.
Findings
Designed structures surpass traditional scattering bounds.
Achieved over 40% fractional bandwidth with high backscattering.
Optimization approach is efficient and practically feasible.
Abstract
Laws of electrodynamics constrain scattering cross-sections of resonant objects. Nevertheless, a fundamental bound that expresses how larger that scattering cross-section can be is yet to be found. Approaches based on cascading multiple resonances permitted to push the scattering responses of subwavelength structures and to exceed existing estimators, for which the Chu-Harrington criterion is, potentially, the most commonly considered one. The superradiant empirical limit, addressing scattering performances of near-field coupled resonator arrays, was subsequently developed to tighten existing estimates, setting a new bound that prompted efforts to find structures that exceed it. Here, we demonstrate that genetically designed superscattering structures, encompassing arrays of constructively interfering electric and magnetic dipoles, can build enormously high scatting cross-sections…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Wave Propagation Studies · Metamaterials and Metasurfaces Applications · Antenna Design and Optimization
