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Quantum Nano-Photonics 2018 ed. [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 474 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 747 g, 126 Illustrations, color; 23 Illustrations, black and white; XVI, 474 p. 149 illus., 126 illus. in color., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Sep-2018
  • Kirjastus: Springer
  • ISBN-10: 9402415467
  • ISBN-13: 9789402415469
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 474 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 747 g, 126 Illustrations, color; 23 Illustrations, black and white; XVI, 474 p. 149 illus., 126 illus. in color., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Sep-2018
  • Kirjastus: Springer
  • ISBN-10: 9402415467
  • ISBN-13: 9789402415469

This book brings together more closely researchers working in the two fields of quantum optics and nano-optics and provides a general overview of the main topics of interest in applied and fundamental research. The contributions cover, for example, single-photon emitters and emitters of entangled photon pairs based on epitaxially grown semiconductor quantum dots, nitrogen vacancy centers in diamond as single-photon emitters, coupled quantum bits based on trapped ions, integrated waveguide superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors, quantum nano-plasmonics, nanosensing, quantum aspects of biophotonics and quantum metamaterials. The articles span the bridge from pedagogical introductions on the fundamental principles to the current state-of-the-art, and are authored by pioneers and leaders in the field. Numerical simulations are presented as a powerful tool to gain insight into the physical behavior of nanophotonic systems and provide a critical complement to experimental investigations and design of devices.

Arvustused

The book will be useful to graduate students entering the field of quantum nanophotonics, as well as to those already working there but wanting to deepen their understanding or broaden their interests. (Mark Fox, Optics & Photonics News, osa-opn.org, April 18, 2019)

Part I Lectures
1 Nanophotonics with and without Photons
3(14)
Sergey V. Gaponenko
2 Non-reciprocity in Parametrically Modulated Systems
17(10)
Martin Frimmer
Lukas Novotny
3 Nanophosphors: From Rare Earth Activated Multicolor-Tuning to New Efficient White Light Sources
27(52)
Maura Cesaria
Baldassare Di Bartolo
4 Non-radiative Processes in Crystals and Nanocrystals
79(18)
John M. Collins
5 Quantum Aspects of Biophotonics
97(20)
Jean-Pierre Wolf
6 Simulations in Nanophotonics
117(16)
Antonino Cala Lesina
Joshua Baxter
Pierre Berini
Lora Ramunno
7 Terahertz Nanoscale Science and Technology
133(16)
John W. Bowen
8 Casimir Forces: Fundamental Theory, Computation, and Nanodevice Applications
149(32)
Fabrizio Pinto
9 Nanomaterials and Nanotechnologies for Photon Radiation Enhanced Cancer Treatment
181(22)
Diana Adliene
10 Fundamental Experiments and Quantum Technology Applications with Defect Centres in Diamond
203(18)
Oliver Benson
11 Emerging Fields of Colloidal Nanophotonics for Quality Lighting to Versatile Lasing
221(14)
Hilmi Volkan Demir
12 Semiconductor Nanophotonics Using Surface Polaritons
235(20)
Thomas G. Folland
Joshua D. Caldwell
13 Waveguide Integrated Superconducting Single Photon Detectors
255(12)
Wolfram H. P. Pernice
14 Whispering Gallery Mode Resonators as Opto-Mechanical Probes to Nanoparticle-Microcavity Interaction and Charge
267(10)
Stephen Arnold
J. R. Lopez
E. Treasurer
K. M. Snyder
D. Keng
15 Novel Aspects of the Fabry-Perot Resonator
277(20)
Markus Pollnau
Nur Ismail
16 Performance of Nd3+ As Structural Probe of Rare-Earth Distribution in Transparent Nanostructured Glass-Ceramics
297(18)
Rolindes Balda
Giulio Gorni
Jose J. Velazquez
Maria J. Pascual
Alicia Duran
Joaquin Fernandez
17 Research on the Yb3+ Ion Activated Cubic Molybdates and Molybdato-Tungstates for Optical Transparent Ceramics
315(42)
M. Guzik
M. Bieza
E. Tomaszewicz
Y. Guyot
G. Boulon
Part II Short Seminars
18 Quantum Key Distribution Over Free Space
357(4)
Fabian Beutel
Jasper Rodiger
Nicolas Perlot
Ronald Freund
Oliver Benson
19 Modelling of Coloured Metal Surfaces by Plasmonics Nanoparticles
361(4)
Antonino Cala Lesina
Jean-Michel Guay
Arnaud Week
Pierre Berini
Lora Ramunno
20 Exciton Dynamics of Colloidal Semiconductor Quantum Well Stacks
365(4)
Onur Erdem
Burak Guzelturk
Murat Olutas
Yusuf Kelestemur
Hilmi Volkan Demir
21 InAsP Quantum Dots in InP Nanowire Waveguides as Sources of Quantum Light
369(2)
James R. Godfrey
Golnaz Azodi
James A. H. Stotz
James M. Fraser
22 Diamond Nanophotonic Circuits
371(2)
W. Hartmann
P. Rath
W. H. P. Pernice
23 Superchiral Near Fields in Photonic Crystal Waveguides
373(2)
Isabelle Palstra
Dolfine Kosters
24 Neodymium Doped Luminescent Composites Derived from the Sols Based on Carboxylic Acids
375(2)
M. V. Rudenko
A. V. Mudryi
T. I. Orekhovskaya
N. V. Gaponenko
25 Vibrational Properties of Ge-Sb-Te Phase-Change Alloys Studied by Temperature-Dependent IR and Raman Spectroscopy
377(4)
K. Shportko
M. Wuttig
26 Size Dependence of the Coupling Strength in Plasmon-Exciton Nanoparticles
381(4)
Felix Stete
Phillip SchoBau
Wouter Koopman
Matias Bargheer
27 Introduction to Shock Wave-Boundary Layer Interaction and Unstart in Supersonic Inlets
385(2)
Hasan Tabanli
K. Bulent Yuceil
28 Investigation of the White Light Emission from Er/Nd/Yb Rare Earth Oxides at Vacuum and Atmospheric Pressure
387(4)
Sevcan Tabanli
Gonul Eryurek
Baldassare Di Bartolo
29 Carbon Nanotubes as Integrated Electrically Driven Light Source
391(4)
N. Walter
S. Khasminskaya
W. H. P. Pernice
Part D3 Posters
30 Plasmonic Metasurfaces for Nonlinear Structured Light
395(4)
Antonino Cala Lesina
Pierre Berini
Lora Ramunno
31 Cell Poration of Fixed and Live Cells by Phase Shaped Femtosecond Pulses
399(2)
Gabriel Campargue
Bastian Zielinski
Sebastien Courvoisier
Cristian Sarpe
Luigi Bonacina
Thomas Baumert
Jean-Pierre Wolf
32 On-Chip Nonlinear Optics in Silicon Rich Nitride Photonic Crystal Cavities
401(2)
Marco Clementi
D. Kapil
F. Gardes
M. Galli
33 Mechanical Activity: The Elastic Counterpart of Optical Activity
403(2)
T. Frenzel
M. Kadic
M. Wegener
34 Highly Compact and Scalable Waveguide-Integrated Single Photon Spectrometer Based on Tailored Disorder
405(2)
W. Hartmann
P. Varytis
K. Busch
W. H. P. Pernice
35 Symmetry Breaking and Active Fano Resonance Tuning in Dolmen Nanostructures
407(2)
G. R. S. Iyer
C. T. Ellis
A. J. Giles
J. G. Tischler
J. D. Caldwell
36 Pump-Profile Engineering for Spatial- and Spectral-Mode Control in Two-Dimensional Colloidal-Quantum-Dot Spasers
409(2)
Robert C. Keitel
Jian Cui
Stephan J. P. Kress
Boris le Feber
Ario Cocina
Karl-Augustin Zaininger
David J. Norris
37 Hybridizing Whispering Gallery Modes and Plasmonic Resonances in a Photonic Meta-device for Bio-sensing Applications
411(2)
Carolin Klusmann
38 Three-Dimensional Chiral Photonic Crystals in the THz Regime Exhibiting Weyl Points with Topological Charges
413(2)
Julian Kopfler
Christian Kern
Ming-Li Chang
Che Ting Chan
Martin Wegener
39 Three-Dimensional Fluorescent Security Features Fabricated via 3D Laser Lithography
415(2)
Frederik Mayer
Stefan Richter
Phillip Hubner
Toufic Jabbour
Martin Wegener
40 Strong Coupling Effects Between IR-Inactive Zone Folded LO Phonon and Localized Surface Phonon Polariton Modes in SiC Nanopiliars
417(2)
Michael A. Meeker
Chase T. Ellis
Joseph G. Tischler
Alexander J. Giles
Orest J. Glemboki
Dmitry N. Chigrin
Francisco J. Bezares
Richard Kasica
Loretta Shirey
Joshua D. Caldwell
41 Measuring the Intensity Profile of Arbitrary Shaped Laser Foci Using Confocal Microscopy
419(2)
Tobias Messer
Patrick Muller
Martin Wegener
42 3D Cubic Buckling Mechanical Metamaterials
421(2)
Alexander Munchinger
Tobias Frenzel
Muamer Kadic
Martin Wegener
43 Light Absorbing Diamond for Solar Energy Conversion
423(2)
S. Orlando
A. Bellucci
M. Girolami
M. Mastellone
D. M. Trucchi
44 Nonlinear Response and Strong Coupling of Surface Phonon Polaritons
425(2)
Nikolai Passler
Ilya Razdolski
Sandy Gewinner
Wieland Schollkopf
Simone De Liberate Christopher Gubbin
Joshua Caldwell
Martin Wolf
Alexander Paarmann
45 Grating Couplers in Silicon-on-Insulator: The Role of Photonic Guided Resonances on Lineshape and Bandwidth
427(2)
Marco Passoni
Dario Gerace
Lee Carroll
Lucio Claudio Andreani
46 Aluminum Plasmonics: Fabrication and Characterization of Broadly Tunable Plasmonic Surfaces for Plasmon Molecule Strong-Coupling and Fluorescence Enhancement
429(2)
Siim Pikker
Shen Boxuan
Kosti Tapio
Gerrit Groenhof
Jussi Toppari
47 3D Metamaterials with Negative Thermal Expansion and Negative Effective Compressibility
431(2)
Jingyuan Qu
Muamer Kadic
Andreas Naber
Alexander Gerber
Frederik Mayer
Martin Wegener
48 Colloidal Spherical Silver Nanoparticles Based PlasmonEnhanced Fluorescence for Rapid Quantitative Point-of-Care Testing Fluorescent Immunoassay Development
433(2)
Andrei Ramanenka
Svetlana Vaschenko
Olga Kulakovich
Alina Muravitskaya
Dmitry Guzatov
Anatoly Lunevich
Yuri Glukhov
Sergey Gaponenko
49 Synthesis and Photoluminescence of Strontium Titanate Xerogels Doped with Terbium, Ytterbium and Europium
435(4)
M. V. Rudenko
T. F. Raichenok
N. V. Mukhin
N. V. Gaponenko
50 Integration of Single Photon Sources with Nano-photonic Circuits
439(2)
P. Schrinner
C. Schuck
51 Vibrational Properties of Ge-Sb-Te Phase-Change Alloys Studied by IR and Raman Spectroscopy at Different Temperatures
441(2)
K. Shportko
M. Wuttig
52 Fock States Engineering with Single Atom Laser
443(2)
Vladislav P. Stefanov
53 Signatures of Strong Coupling on Nanoparticles: Revealing Absorption Anticrossing by Tuning the Dielectric Environment
445(4)
Felix Stete
Wouter Koopman
Matias Bargheer
54 Solid State Synthesis, Structural and Up-Conversion Properties of Yb3+/Er3+ and Yb3+/Tm3+/Er3+ Doped La2Ti2O7 Phosphors
449(4)
Sevcan Tabanli
Murat Erdem
Burak Canturk
Ayhan Mergen
Gonul Eryurek
55 Static and Tunable Devices for Terahertz Focusing and Beam Steering
453(4)
Silvia Tofani
Walter Fuscaldo
Alessandro Galli
Romeo Beccherelli
List of Participants 457(8)
Index 465
BALDASSARE DI BARTOLO Baldassare (friendly called Rino by friends) teaches physics at Boston College. He got his first degree in Industrial Engineering at the University of Palermo and followed his studies in Telecommunications and Radar Technique in Rome at the Superior Institute of Telecommunications and National Research Council, respectively.





After an insdustrial experience in Italy he moved to the United States where he gained a Ph.D. in Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.





An industrail experience in USA in the of laser physics was a prelude to his joining Boston College where he has been teaching since 1968.





He has written or edited some 36 books and published 170 articles. He has written two books of short stories in Italian.





He has been the director of the International Atomic and Molecular Spectroscopy of the Ettore Majorana center in Erice Sicily, Italy since 1974 





 





LUCIANO SILVESTRI





Luciano Silvestri received his Bachelor degree summa cum laudae from University of Massachusetts Boston in 2011 with a thesis in the thermalization of open quantum systems. In addition, as an undergrad he worked on the manufacturing and characterization of nano-electromechanical systems at Northeastern University.





Since 2011 he has been the Scientific Secretary of the International School of Atomic and Molecular Spectroscopy in Erice. He has been part of the organizing committee of the last four NATO ASI on Nano-Optics and Nano-Photonics, and three Workshops on Luminescence.





He is currently completing his Doctoral degree in theoretical physics at Boston College. His research interests have shifted to strongly coupled plasmas and nuclear fusion.





 





MAURA CESARIA 





Cesaria Maura graduated in Physics cum laude in 2008 at the University of Salento (Lecce, Italy) and received her Ph.D. degree in Physics in 2012 at the University of Salento (Lecce, Italy) with a thesis dealing with the experimental and theoretical characterization of very thin Cr-doped ITO films deposited by pulsed laser ablation for spintronic applications. Since then she has worked as a research fellow in Italy in the fields of material science and nanophotonics.





Her research activity at the Physics Department of the University of Salento have focused on laser-based deposition techniques (i.e., nano- and femto-second PLD, MAPLE) for depositing inorganic bulk materials and nanostructures as well as monolayer and multilayer of emitting polymers. In this framework her studies contributed to the understanding of the origin of itinerant ferromagnetism in Cr-doped ITO films as related to Cr-oxygen vacancy complexes, the development ex-novo of a theoretical algorithm and experimental spectrophotometric procedure for calculating a realistic absorption coefficient of (ultra)thin films covering transparent substrates that first and only one includes the non measurable contribution from the film-substrate interface, and the realization of the first white light emitting diode made by multi-layer polymeric thin films.





More recently, her activity as a fixed-term researcher at the IMM-CNR Institute (unit of Lecce-Italy) has focused on PDMS-based microfluidics and colloidal lithography techniques for sensing applications using plasmonic nanoparticles and short-range ordered nanohole arrays .





Since 2013 she contributes to the organization of the Spectroscopy School held at the Majorana Foundation (Erice, Italy) and collaborates with Prof. Di Bartolo (Boston College (MA, USA)) in spectroscopy studies of white-light emitting nanophosphors. 





JOHN COLLINS 





John Collins is a Professor of Physics at Wheaton College in Norton, MA USA. His research areas of interest involve the interaction of radiation with matter. He is an experimental physicist trained in the field of luminescence spectroscopy of solids doped with transition metal and rare earth ions. Specific areas of interest include energy transfer, nonradiative processes, luminescence in nanosystems, and plasmonic effects on radiative and non-radiative processes of excited ions in solids. Dr. Collins has co-edited several books and journal volumes on topics such as spectroscopy of solids, nano-optics, biophotonics, and visible and infrared phosphors, and has authored or co-authored numerous articles and book chapters. He has served as Chair of the Luminescence and Display Materials Division of the Electrochemical Society and currently serves on its Executive Committee, and also serves on the Organizing Committee of the International School of Atomic and Molecular Spectroscopy.