dc.description.abstract | Surface polaritons (hybrid light-matter waves occurring in metal-like materials) allow the
study of light at the nanoscale. This is because, as a difference to what happens with light
in conventional optics, surface polaritons allow for beating the diffraction limit, opening the
door for controlling light at the nanoscale. In this work, we will study from numerical simulations
how surface polaritons propagate within different environments, including strongly
anisotropic media. Particularly, we will study how surface polaritons reflect at boundaries
with isotropic, uniaxial, and biaxial media, and analyze how different parameters, both from
a physical and a more purely numerical point of view, affect the results obtained. However,
the simulations will be performed with light (the excitation is straightforward in this case),
being able to extrapolate all the results obtained directly to SPs. This study will allow
us to explore a range of different exotic optical phenomena, such as anomalous reflections
and back-reflections. Finally, as anisotropic back-reflection observations have yet not been
achieved, we propose an experimental scenario based on our simulations that might allow
its visualization. All this work was carried out using the commercial software COMSOL
MULTIPHYSICS. | |