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Based on the substantial difference in the response time for the resonant and background partitions at stepwise variations of the exiting signal, a simple exactly integrable model describing the dynamic Fano resonance (DFRs) is proposed. The model does not have any fitting parameters, may include any number of resonant partitions and exhibits high accuracy. It is shown that at the point of the destructive interference any sharp variation of the amplitude of the excitation (no matter an increase or a decrease) gives rise to pronounced flashes in the intensity of the output signal. In particular, the flash should appear behind the trailing edge of the exciting pulse, when the excitation is already over. The model is applied to explain the DFRs at the light scattering by a dielectric cylinder with two resonant modes excited simultaneously and exhibits the excellent agreement with the results of the direct numerical integration of the Maxwell equations.
We study numerically and analytically effects of resonant light scattering by subwavelength high-index particles with weak dissipation in the vicinity of the destructive interference at Fano resonances. We show that sharp variations in the envelope o
We demonstrate that directional electromagnetic scattering can be realized from a artificial Mie resonant strcuture which supports electric and magnetic dipole modes simultaneously. The directivity of the far-field radiation pattern can be switched b
Exciting optical effects such as polarization control, imaging, and holography were demonstrated at the nanoscale using the complex and irregular structures of nanoparticles with the multipole Mie-resonances in the optical range. The optical response
If the duration of the input pulse resonantly interacting with a system is comparable or smaller than the time required for the system to achieve the steady state, transient effects become important. For complex systems, a quantitative description of
Dielectric optical nanoantennas play an important role in color displays, metasurface holograms, and wavefront shaping applications. They usually exploit Mie resonances as supported on nanostructures with high refractive index, such as Si and TiO2. H