4.6 Article

Structure of whispering-gallery modes in optical microdisks perturbed by nanoparticles

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW A
Volume 84, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.84.063828

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DFG research group [760]

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It is a well-known fact that a single nanoparticle placed in the evanescent field of an optical microdisk leads to coherent backscattering of light between counterpropagating whispering-gallery modes. This backscattering lifts the spectral degeneracy giving rise to a doublet of standing-wave modes. Here, we show that the evanescent coupling of two or more nanoparticles leads in general to asymmetric backscattering (i.e., the strength of the scattering of light from the clockwise to the counterclockwise propagation direction is different than the other way around). Even if the strength of the backscattering is weak its asymmetry can have a dramatic impact on the mode structure. In the regime of overlapping resonances the modes do not have a standing-wave character. Instead nonorthogonal pairs of mainly copropagating modes are formed. In the extreme case the pair of optical modes coalesce at a so-called exceptional point. We derive an effective Hamiltonian within a two-mode approximation which reveals that this unexpected behavior is due to interference of the scattered waves which can be destructive or constructive depending on the propagation direction of the light.

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