Excitation of non-radiating anapoles in dielectric nanospheres

ORAL

Abstract

Nonradiating anapoles are superposition of internal modes that can act as an energy reservoir by reducing the far-field scattering. We report experimental excitation of the electrodynamic anapole mode in isotropic silicon nanospheres at the optical frequencies using radially polarized beam illumination. The superposition of equal and out-of-phase amplitudes of the Cartesian electric and toroidal dipoles produces by a pronounced dip in the scattering spectra with the scattering intensity almost reaching zero – a signature of anapole excitation. The total scattering intensity associated with the anapole excitation is found to be more than 10 times weaker, and the internal energy is found to be 6 times greater for illumination with radially vs. linearly polarized beams. Our approach provides a simple, straightforward alternative path to realize electrodynamic anapole mode at the optical frequencies.

*This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) under Grant No. ECCS-1809410. H.S. and M. F. acknowledge KAKENHI grant numbers 18K14092 and 18KK0141.

Presenters

  • Uttam Manna

    • Illinois State University

Authors

  • Uttam Manna

    • Illinois State University
  • John A. Parker

    • University of Chicago
  • Hiroshi Sugimoto

    • Kobe University
  • Brighton Coe

    • Illinois State University
  • Daniel Eggena

    • Illinois State University
  • Minoru Fujii

    • Kobe University
  • Norbert F. Scherer

    • University of Chicago
  • Stephen K Gray

    • Argonne Natl Lab
    • Argonne National Laboratory