2008
DOI: 10.1364/ao.47.002897
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Local field intensity in aggregates illuminated by diffuse light: T matrix approach

Abstract: We derive an analytic expression for the local field intensity in an aggregate of particles illuminated by diffuse light (T matrix formalism). To be precise, the diffuse light average is obtained by averaging the electromagnetic response from plane waves over all possible incident field direction polarizations. We applied this new averaging formula to analyze variations in the electromagnetic couplings between two isotropic spheres as a function of their separation distance. The numerical calculations were per… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…This is a particular strength of the method which has led to analytical formulas for orientation-averaged quantities such as far-field cross-sections [41,45]. Such results were recently extended by Rockstuhl and coworkers for optical activity [26], and by Stout and co-workers for near-field quantities in clusters of spherical particles [46,47]. We extend here these previous results to the calculation of orientationaveraged near-field optical chirality.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 63%
“…This is a particular strength of the method which has led to analytical formulas for orientation-averaged quantities such as far-field cross-sections [41,45]. Such results were recently extended by Rockstuhl and coworkers for optical activity [26], and by Stout and co-workers for near-field quantities in clusters of spherical particles [46,47]. We extend here these previous results to the calculation of orientationaveraged near-field optical chirality.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 63%
“…The computational method itself is also subject to other sources of error, such as the fineness of a mesh when the scatterers are discretised in FEM, FDTD or DDA; in the T -matrix method employed here, the key convergence parameter is the maximum multipolar order l max which is used to truncate field expansions 53 . In our implementation, note that l max refers to scatterer-centred expansions 13,22 . Remarkably, we find no interaction between N inc and l max when studying the convergence of orientation-averaged quantities.…”
Section: Dimermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…incident and scattered fields yield analytical formulas for orientation-averaged optical properties. This powerful formalism enables benchmark calculations for various quantities of interest, which include orientation-averaged extinction, scattering and absorption 19,20 , circular dichroism 21 , but also near-field intensity 22 and local degree of optical chirality 23,24 . Although analytical, these orientationaveraged expressions can become quite involved in the case of near-field quantities, requiring the costly evaluation of translation matrices for each evaluation point.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2.23. T-matrix calculations of internal, surface, and local fields [13,23,26,31,37,40,112,134,153,162,198,206,207,247].…”
Section: T-matrix Calculations Of Optical Forces and Torques Onmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…T-matrix calculations for finite circular cylinders[21,36,51,57,61,67,78,80,103,128,129,145,147,149,158,180,211,219,222,226,227,235,237,240,241,252]. ,[13][14][15]25,[28][29][30][31]37,40,41,44,45,[48][49][50]54,72,74,82, 92,93,102,110,112,119,120,122,123,125,134,137,141-143,…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%