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The interaction of whispering gallery modes (WGM) of optical microresonators with subwavelength imperfections has been studied both experimentally and theoretically. This interaction is responsible for the formation of spectral doublets in place of single resonance peaks, and for degrading of Q-factors of the resonances. Within the currently accepted framework the spectral doublets are explained as a result of degeneracy removal of clockwise and counterclockwise WGMs due to their coupling caused by defect-induced backscattering, while the degrading of the Q-factor is described phenomenologically as an additional contribution to the overall decay rate of WGM due to coupling between WGM and radiative modes. Here we show that the existing understanding of this phenomenon is conceptually wrong and develop an exact theory of WGM interaction with a single defect, which provides a unified treatment for both aspects of this interaction explaining existing experiments and predicting new phenomena.
We demonstrated the tuning of whispering gallery modes (WGMs) of a silica microsphere during optical levitation through the annealing process. We determined the annealing temperature from the power balance between the CO2 laser light heating and seve
Quasiclassical approach and geometric optics allow to describe rather accurately whispering gallery modes in convex axisymmetric bodies. Using this approach we obtain practical formulas for the calculation of eigenfrequencies and radiative Q-factors
Whispering gallery mode resonators (WGMRs) take advantage of strong light confinement and long photon lifetime for applications in sensing, optomechanics, microlasers and quantum optics. However, their rotational symmetry and low radiation loss imped
We investigate numerically and experimentally the statistics of the changes in the amount of frequency splitting upon the adsorption of particles one-by-one into the mode volume of whispering gallery mode (WGM) microresonator and microlasers. This mu
Whispering gallery mode (WGM) resonators are an important building block for linear, nonlinear and quantum optical experiments. In such experiments, independent control of coupling rates to different modes can lead to improved conversion efficiencies