2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.cpc.2014.05.027
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An optical target to eliminate impinging light in a light scattering simulation

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…To analyze the sub-diffraction focusing phenomenon of the incoming light, the outgoing light needs to be eliminated. By exploiting the linear nature of the Maxwell's equations, a soft sink 22) is employed to eliminate the outgoing light component. Without the outgoing light component, the incoming light focuses into twin peaks [Figs.…”
Section: Simulation Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To analyze the sub-diffraction focusing phenomenon of the incoming light, the outgoing light needs to be eliminated. By exploiting the linear nature of the Maxwell's equations, a soft sink 22) is employed to eliminate the outgoing light component. Without the outgoing light component, the incoming light focuses into twin peaks [Figs.…”
Section: Simulation Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Eliminating the outgoing light component is necessary to quantify the impinging light component [23]. Based upon the linearity of the Maxwell's equations, we employ a soft sink simulation technique [24] to subtract out only the outgoing light component. Analogous to the soft source in the forward scenario, a soft sink is implemented by adding a finite-width CW plane wave propagating in the opposite direction with the precise amplitude but 180-degree out of phase.…”
Section: Analyzing Back-propagated Light Reaching the Target Positionmentioning
confidence: 99%