1985
DOI: 10.1016/0030-4018(85)90134-8
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Zero order anomaly of dielectric coated gratings

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Cited by 199 publications
(66 citation statements)
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“…Such resonances, being Fano-type discrete states in the continuum background, are characterized by a finite frequency linewidth due to radiative losses even in transparent materials. The existence of radiative losses seems to exclude a possibility of full reflectivity, however, all the models [11,14,22,23,24,25] show this effect in transparent PCS. Moreover, it appears that very different physical models, with only one common thing, the existence of any resonance, predict a qualitatively similar behavior of the PCS optical response, see, e.g., discussions in [14,18,26,27].…”
mentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Such resonances, being Fano-type discrete states in the continuum background, are characterized by a finite frequency linewidth due to radiative losses even in transparent materials. The existence of radiative losses seems to exclude a possibility of full reflectivity, however, all the models [11,14,22,23,24,25] show this effect in transparent PCS. Moreover, it appears that very different physical models, with only one common thing, the existence of any resonance, predict a qualitatively similar behavior of the PCS optical response, see, e.g., discussions in [14,18,26,27].…”
mentioning
confidence: 91%
“…28) of such photonic resonances are often caused by the so-called guided resonance modes (GRMs) 22,23,29 . The spectrally narrow linewidth of these modes originates from the suppression of their radiative losses through the long-range destructive interference between multiple unit cells of a photonic crystal and, therefore, is extremely sensitive to the light's incidence angle 22,24,25,28,30,31 . Such angular sensitivity prevents miniaturization of photonic crystal devices 22,26,32 and imposes severe restrictions on the angular divergence of the incident light beams.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The segmented grating acts as a frequency-selective mirror based on the resonant reflection [8] which results from destructive interferences taking place in the device. Under coupling condition (1), part of the incident beam is directly transmitted through the device (t in Fig.…”
Section: Principles and Theoretical Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%