Buzz Bloom said:
Hi vsv:
Thank you very much for citing the Bethe reference. I do not have any convenient access to a technical library. However, the research librarian at our town library does a very good job in tracking down copies of technical articles for me, although it can take several weeks to do so.
I did a search on "extraordinary optical transmission", and I found several articles that seemed not too difficult for me to understand. From these discussions I was unable to find anything directly related to the problem I asked about.
Regards,
Buzz
I am slightly new to contributing on this forum, so I may have misunderstood the situation. The article I gave you is available from Phys. Rev. website, but is only available you have the subscription. I get mine via the university.
If you do not have a subscription, you may find the paper in the library, but it becomes a long process which is the opposite of what I aimed to help you with. Another place where diffraction by a small hole is discussed is in "Classical Electrodynamics" by J.D. Jackson (Sec. 10.9 in the 3rd ed). This book may seem difficult, but this is only because it contains a lot and does a proper job of explaining it. I can suggest some other books on electrodynamics, but if you do not have access to a technical library it may be best to stick to the most popular ones, and Jackson is certainly that (at the university level).
Now regarding the extraordinary transmission. This is new-ish development in the problem of transmission through a small hole. Bethe established the first rigorous treatment of passing electromagnetic plane waves through a small aperture (other weaker treatments existed before), and for a while this remained the orthodoxy. Then Ebbesen noted that the amount of light transmitted by small holes in metallic screens was much larger then predicted by Bethe. Hence the "extraordinary". The reason for the discrepancy was that Bethe treated holes in a perfectly conducting sheet, whilst Ebbesen worked with noble metals at optical frequencies, where metals show plasmonic response. I thought it may be a good idea to get this on your radar, but basically Bethe's treatment (also done in Jackson) should be the first port of call.
slow said:
Would it be useful to change your initial question for another one, for example the following one?
Let us suppose that initially there are no photons, neither on one side of the pierced barrier or on the other. Can you calculate the probability of finding photons on the other side of the pierced barrier, when photons appear on the first side?
I would argue that this is a very bad idea. Photons are not "balls of light". They are excitations of the quantum electromagnetic field. In essence, photons are Maxwell's Equations + a lot of other tricky effects which are hard to derive on paper, and hard to observe in experiment. My advice is to stick to Maxwell's Equations, it will give you the correct result. Only go to quantum picture if you have nonclassical light, or single quantum emitters etc., and if you are not talking about quantum fields then forget photons.