1,904 research outputs found
Backward-wave regime and negative refraction in chiral composites
Possibilities to realize a negative refraction in chiral composites in in
dual-phase mixtures of chiral and dipole particles is studied. It is shown that
because of strong resonant interaction between chiral particles (helixes) and
dipoles, there is a stop band in the frequency area where the backward-wave
regime is expected. The negative refraction can occur near the resonant
frequency of chiral particles. Resonant chiral composites may offer a root to
realization of negative-refraction effect and superlenses in the optical
region
Arbitrary beam control using passive lossless metasurfaces enabled by orthogonally-polarized custom surface waves
For passive, lossless impenetrable metasurfaces, a design technique for
arbitrary beam control of receiving, guiding, and launching is presented.
Arbitrary control is enabled by a custom surface wave in an orthogonal
polarization such that its addition to the incident (input) and the desired
scattered (output) fields is supported by a reactive surface impedance
everywhere on the reflecting surface. Such a custom surface wave (SW) takes the
form of an evanescent wave propagating along the surface with a spatially
varying envelope. A growing SW appears when an illuminating beam is received.
The SW amplitude stays constant when power is guided along the surface. The
amplitude diminishes as a propagating wave (PW) is launched from the surface as
a leaky wave. The resulting reactive tensor impedance profile may be realized
as an array of anisotropic metallic resonators printed on a grounded dielectric
substrate. Illustrative design examples of a Gaussian beam
translator-reflector, a probe-fed beam launcher, and a near-field focusing lens
are provided
Effective electric and magnetic properties of metasurfaces in transition from crystalline to amorphous state
In this paper we theoretically study electromagnetic reflection,
transmission, and scattering properties of periodic and random arrays of
particles which exhibit both electric-mode and magnetic-mode resonances. We
compare the properties of regular and random grids and explain recently
observed dramatic differences in resonance broadening in the electric and
magnetic modes of random arrays. We show that randomness in the particle
positioning influences equally on the scattering loss from both electric and
magnetic dipoles, however, the observed resonance broadening can be very
different depending on the absorption level in different modes as well as on
the average electrical distance between the particles. The theory is
illustrated by an example of a planar metasurface composed of cut-wire pairs.
We show that in this particular case at the magnetic resonance the array
response is almost not affected by positioning randomness due to lower
frequency and higher absorption losses in that mode. The developed model allows
predictions of behavior of random grids based on the knowledge of
polarizabilities of single inclusions.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, and submitted to PR
Competing ideologies of Russia's civil society
Many analysts and public opinion makers in the West conflate the notions of Russia’s non-systemic liberal opposition and the country’s civil society. Indeed, despite garnering the support of a minority of Russia’s population, non-systemic liberal opposition represents a well-organized civic group with a clearly articulated agenda and the ability to take action. Yet, does Russia’s civil society end there? A closer look at the country’s politics shows that Russia has a substantial conservative-traditionalist faction that has also developed agenda for action and formulated opinions. This group is anti-liberal rather than illiberal ideologically and pro-strong state/pro a geopolitically independent Russia rather than pro-Kremlin politically. The interaction between liberal and conservative civic groups represents the battle of meanings, ideas, and ethics, and ultimately determines the future trajectory of Russia’s evolution. Thus, the analysis of Russia’s civil society must represent a rather more nuanced picture than a mere study of the liberal non-systemic opposition. This article will examine the complexity of Russia’s civil society scene with reference to the interplay between the liberal opposition and conservative majority factions. The paper will argue that such complexity stems from ideological value pluralism that falls far beyond the boundaries of the liberal consensus, often skewing our understanding of political practice in Russia
Modeling of Isotropic Backward-Wave Materials Composed of Resonant Spheres
A possibility to realize isotropic artificial backward-wave materials is
theoretically analyzed. An improved mixing rule for the effective permittivity
of a composite material consisting of two sets of resonant dielectric spheres
in a homogeneous background is presented. The equations are validated using the
Mie theory and numerical simulations. The effect of a statistical distribution
of sphere sizes on the increasing of losses in the operating frequency band is
discussed and some examples are shown.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
De Sitter stability in quadratic gravity
Quadratic curvature corrections to Einstein-Hilbert action lead in general to
higher-order equations of motion, which can induced instability of some
unperturbed solutions of General Relativity. We study conditions for stability
of de Sitter cosmological solution. We argue that simple form of this condition
known for FRW background in 3+1 dimensions changes seriously if at least one of
these two assumptions is violated. In the present paper the stability
conditions for de Sitter solution have been found for multidimensional FRW
background and for Bianchi I metrics in 3+1 dimensions.Comment: 12 pages with 4 figures; references adde
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