Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the first edition
- Preface to the second edition
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Theoretical foundations
- 3 Propagation and focusing of optical fields
- 4 Resolution and localization
- 5 Nanoscale optical microscopy
- 6 Localization of light with near-field probes
- 7 Probe–sample distance control
- 8 Optical interactions
- 9 Quantum emitters
- 10 Dipole emission near planar interfaces
- 11 Photonic crystals, resonators, and cavity optomechanics
- 12 Surface plasmons
- 13 Optical antennas
- 14 Optical forces
- 15 Fluctuation-induced interactions
- 16 Theoretical methods in nano-optics
- Appendix A Semi-analytical derivation of the atomic polarizability
- Appendix B Spontaneous emission in the weak-coupling regime
- Appendix C Fields of a dipole near a layered substrate
- Appendix D Far-field Green functions
- Index
Preface to the first edition
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the first edition
- Preface to the second edition
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Theoretical foundations
- 3 Propagation and focusing of optical fields
- 4 Resolution and localization
- 5 Nanoscale optical microscopy
- 6 Localization of light with near-field probes
- 7 Probe–sample distance control
- 8 Optical interactions
- 9 Quantum emitters
- 10 Dipole emission near planar interfaces
- 11 Photonic crystals, resonators, and cavity optomechanics
- 12 Surface plasmons
- 13 Optical antennas
- 14 Optical forces
- 15 Fluctuation-induced interactions
- 16 Theoretical methods in nano-optics
- Appendix A Semi-analytical derivation of the atomic polarizability
- Appendix B Spontaneous emission in the weak-coupling regime
- Appendix C Fields of a dipole near a layered substrate
- Appendix D Far-field Green functions
- Index
Summary
Why should we care about nano-optics? For the same reason we care about optics! The foundations of many fields of the contemporary sciences have been established using optical experiments. To give an example, think of quantum mechanics. Blackbody radiation, hydrogen lines, or the photoelectric effect were key experiments that nurtured the quantum idea. Today, optical spectroscopy is a powerful means to identify the atomic and chemical structure of different materials. The power of optics is based on the simple fact that the energy of light quanta lies in the energy range of electronic and vibrational transitions in matter. This fact is at the core of our abilities for visual perception and is the reason why experiments with light are very close to our intuition. Optics, and in particular optical imaging, helps us to consciously and logically connect complicated concepts. Therefore, pushing optical interactions to the nanometer scale opens up new perspectives, properties and phenomena in the emerging century of the nanoworld.
Nano-optics aims at the understanding of optical phenomena on the nanometer scale, i.e. near or beyond the diffraction limit of light. It is an emerging new field of study, motivated by the rapid advance of nanoscience and nanotechnology and by their need for adequate tools and strategies for fabrication, manipulation and characterization at the nanometer scale. Interestingly, nano-optics predates the trend of nanotechnology by more than a decade. An optical counterpart to the scanning tunneling microscope (STM) was demonstrated in 1984 and optical resolutions had been achieved that were significantly beyond the diffraction limit of light.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Principles of Nano-Optics , pp. xv - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012