Enhancement of transversal magneto-optical Kerr effect (TKE) is controlled experimentally in magnetoplasmonic subwavelength nanogratings made of nickel films by resonant excitation of surface plasmon-polaritons (SPPs). Almost one order of magnitude increase of the TKE value is observed in the spectral range of Wood’s anomaly corresponding to the fulfillment of the phase-matching conditions for SPP excitation.
Abstract. Direct measurements of aggregation forces in piconewton range between two red blood cells in pair rouleau are performed under physiological conditions using double trap optical tweezers. Aggregation and disaggregation properties of healthy and pathologic (system lupus erythematosis) blood samples are analyzed. Strong difference in aggregation speed and behavior is revealed using the offered method which is proposed to be a promising tool for SLE monitoring at single cell level.
The magneto-optical Faraday effect is studied in one-dimensional magnetophotonic crystals ͑MPCs͒. Mechanisms of a strong enhancement of the Faraday rotation at the edges of the photonic band gap are considered. High difference of refractive indexes of bismuth-substituted yttrium iron garnet ͑Bi:YIG͒ and SiO 2 layers provides a strong spatial localization of the optical field in Bi:YIG layers, which leads to manifold Faraday rotation enhancement at the photonic band edges. The Faraday rotation angle in the finite MPCs appears to be a nonlinear function of the total thickness of magnetic material in the stack that can be interpreted as the nonlinear Verdet law. Relation between the enhancement of the Faraday rotation and localization of optical field in magnetic layers is treated as a Borrmann-type effect. This relation shows that the Faraday rotation can be considered as a measure of the density of photonic states trapped within Bi:YIG layers.
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