Broadband suppression of backscattering at optical frequencies using low permittivity dielectric spheres

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Abstract

The exact suppression of backscattering from rotationally symmetric objects requires dual symmetric materials where ϵ r = μ r. This prevents their design at many frequency bands, including the optical one, because magnetic materials are not available. Electromagnetically small non-magnetic spheres of large permittivity offer an alternative. They can be tailored to exhibit balanced electric and magnetic dipole polarizabilities a 1 = b 1, which result in approximate zero backscattering. In this case, the effect is inherently narrowband. Here, we put forward a different alternative that allows broadband functionality: Wavelength-sized spheres made from low permittivity materials. The effect occurs in a parameter regime where approximate duality is met for all multipolar order a n ≈ b n, in a weakly wavelength dependence fashion. In addition, and despite of the low permittivity, the overall scattering response of these spheres is still significant. Scattering patterns are shown to be highly directive across an octave spanning band. The effect is analytically and numerically shown using the Mie coefficients.

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Ismail Abdelrahman, M., Rockstuhl, C., & Fernandez-Corbaton, I. (2017). Broadband suppression of backscattering at optical frequencies using low permittivity dielectric spheres. Scientific Reports, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-15192-0

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