Axil,
First, if you use paragraphs, your posts will be much more readable.
Second, your URL link is broken. The new one is -
Structure Enhancement Factor Relationships in Single Gold Nanoantennas..
http://sites.weinberg.northwestern.edu/vanduyne/files/2013/01/2012_Kleinman_2.pdf
A good, even
Lou,
I believe that the huge energy concentrations seen in Nanoplasmonic hot
spots are Dark mode concentrations of LIGHT that can produce magnetic
anapole EMF.
A new post will be written on this subject shortly. Matter/light
interactions can pack light into solitons in an open ended manor to
Axil wrote (in two postings):
Its a matter of simple proportions. A one nanometer nanoparticle that
bends a infrared light wave whose wavelength is 1 mm into a spherical
soliton would pack the optical energy of that infrared wave into that
small
soliton at an amplification of 1,000,000
*Experimentally measuring hot spot energy concentration.* In a seminal
Nanoplasmonics paper, the ability of hot spots to concentrate power is
experimentally determined for the first time.
Harry,
A reasonable analogy.
Surprising that such energy/momentum foci occur in such fields.
It would be interesting to know if materials can be engineered to create
them near, or between, surfaces.
-- Lou Pagnucco
H Veeder wrote:
Like a twig whipping around an eddy in a stream?
Harry
On
It’s a matter of simple proportions. A one nanometer nanoparticle that
bends a infrared light wave whose wavelength is 1 mm into a spherical
soliton would pack the optical energy of that infrared wave into that small
soliton at an amplification of 1,000,000 times.
On Sat, Nov 9, 2013 at 1:30 PM,
By the way, that nanoparticle would convert that infrared wave into an
x-ray.
On Sat, Nov 9, 2013 at 1:57 PM, Axil Axil janap...@gmail.com wrote:
It’s a matter of simple proportions. A one nanometer nanoparticle that
bends a infrared light wave whose wavelength is 1 mm into a spherical
Surprising, but a monochromatic field can impart momentum superkicks to
charged particles much greater than the momentum of a field photon.
Superkicks near optical vortices
http://iopscience.iop.org/2040-8986/labtalk-article/55223
Superweak momentum transfer near optical vortices
Like a twig whipping around an eddy in a stream?
Harry
On Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 6:49 PM, pagnu...@htdconnect.com wrote:
Surprising, but a monochromatic field can impart momentum superkicks to
charged particles much greater than the momentum of a field photon.
Superkicks near optical vortices
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