Resonant behavior of dielectric objects (electrostatic resonances).

D R Fredkin, I D Mayergoyz
Author Information
  1. D R Fredkin: Department of Physics, University of California-San Diego, La Jolla, California 92037, USA. drfredkin@ucsd.edu

Abstract

Resonant behavior of dielectric objects occurs at certain frequencies for which the object permittivity is negative and the free-space wavelength is large in comparison with the object dimensions. Unique physical features of these resonances are studied and a novel technique for the calculation of resonance values of permittivity, and hence resonance frequencies, is proposed. Scale invariance of resonance frequencies, unusually strong orthogonality properties of resonance modes, and a two-dimensional phenomenon of "twin" spectra are reported. The paper concludes with brief discussions of optical controllability of these resonances in semiconductor nanoparticles and a plausible, electrostatic resonance based, mechanism for nucleation and formation of ball lightning.

MeSH Term

Biosensing Techniques
Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy
Models, Theoretical
Static Electricity

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0resonancefrequenciesresonancesResonantbehaviordielectricobjectsobjectpermittivityelectrostaticoccurscertainnegativefree-spacewavelengthlargecomparisondimensionsUniquephysicalfeaturesstudiednoveltechniquecalculationvalueshenceproposedScaleinvarianceunusuallystrongorthogonalitypropertiesmodestwo-dimensionalphenomenon"twin"spectrareportedpaperconcludesbriefdiscussionsopticalcontrollabilitysemiconductornanoparticlesplausiblebasedmechanismnucleationformationballlightning

Similar Articles

Cited By (6)