Extreme Sensitivity of Output Directionality to Boundary Perturbation in Wavelength-Scale Microcavities
arXiv:1208.0792 · doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.87.023833
Abstract
We report a surprising observation that the output directionality from wavelength-scale optical microcavities displays extreme sensitivity to deformations of the cavity shape. A variation of the cavity boundary on the order of ten thousandth of a wavelength may flip the output directions by 180 degrees. Our analysis based on a perturbation theory reveals that a tiny shape variation can cause a strong mixing of nearly degenerate cavity resonances with different angular momenta, and their interference determines the farfield emission pattern. This work shows the possibility of utilizing carefully-designed wavelength-scale microcavities for high-resolution detection and sensing applications.
5 pages, 4 figures