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Mie scattering

In electromagnetism, the Mie solution to Maxwell's equations (also known as the Lorenz–Mie solution, the Lorenz–Mie–Debye solution or Mie scattering) describes the scattering of an electromagnetic plane wave by a homogeneous sphere. The solution takes the form of an infinite series of spherical multipole partial waves. It is named after German physicist Gustav Mie.

Mie scattering as particle diameter changes from 0.1 wavelengths to 1 wavelength. The sphere's refractive index is 1.5
Mie scattering, artistic view (Linearly polarized incident plane wave scattered by octupolar resonance)
Mie resonances vs. radius
Monostatic radar cross section (RCS) of a perfectly conducting metal sphere as a function of frequency (calculated by Mie theory). In the low-frequency Rayleigh scattering limit, where the circumference is less than the wavelength, the normalized RCS is In the high-frequency optical limit,

The term Mie solution is also used for solutions of Maxwell's equations for scattering by stratified spheres or by infinite cylinders, or other geometries where one can write separate equations for the radial and angular dependence of solutions. The term Mie theory is sometimes used for this collection of solutions and methods; it does not refer to an independent physical theory or law. More broadly, the "Mie scattering" formulas are most useful in situations where the size of the scattering particles is comparable to the wavelength of the light, rather than much smaller or much larger.

Mie scattering (sometimes referred to as a non-molecular scattering or aerosol particle scattering) takes place in the lower 4,500 m (15,000 ft) of the atmosphere, where many essentially spherical particles with diameters approximately equal to the wavelength of the incident ray may be present. Mie scattering theory has no upper size limitation, and converges to the limit of geometric optics for large particles.[1]

Introduction edit

 
Angular part of magnetic and electric vector spherical harmonics. Red and green arrows show the direction of the field. Generating scalar functions are also presented, only the first three orders are shown (dipoles, quadrupoles, octupoles).

A modern formulation of the Mie solution to the scattering problem on a sphere can be found in many books, e.g., J. A. Stratton's Electromagnetic Theory.[2] In this formulation, the incident plane wave, as well as the scattering field, is expanded into radiating spherical vector spherical harmonics. The internal field is expanded into regular vector spherical harmonics. By enforcing the boundary condition on the spherical surface, the expansion coefficients of the scattered field can be computed.

For particles much larger or much smaller than the wavelength of the scattered light there are simple and accurate approximations that suffice to describe the behavior of the system. But for objects whose size is within a few orders of magnitude of the wavelength, e.g., water droplets in the atmosphere, latex particles in paint, droplets in emulsions, including milk, and biological cells and cellular components, a more detailed approach is necessary.[3]

The Mie solution[4] is named after its developer, German physicist Gustav Mie. Danish physicist Ludvig Lorenz and others independently developed the theory of electromagnetic plane wave scattering by a dielectric sphere.

The formalism allows the calculation of the electric and magnetic fields inside and outside a spherical object and is generally used to calculate either how much light is scattered (the total optical cross section), or where it goes (the form factor). The notable features of these results are the Mie resonances, sizes that scatter particularly strongly or weakly.[5] This is in contrast to Rayleigh scattering for small particles and Rayleigh–Gans–Debye scattering (after Lord Rayleigh, Richard Gans and Peter Debye) for large particles. The existence of resonances and other features of Mie scattering makes it a particularly useful formalism when using scattered light to measure particle size.

Approximations edit

Rayleigh approximation (scattering) edit

 
The change of sky colour at sunset (red nearest the sun, blue furthest away) is caused by Rayleigh scattering by atmospheric gas particles, which are much smaller than the wavelengths of visible light. The grey/white colour of the clouds is caused by Mie scattering by water droplets, which are of a comparable size to the wavelengths of visible light.

Rayleigh scattering describes the elastic scattering of light by spheres that are much smaller than the wavelength of light. The intensity I of the scattered radiation is given by

 

where I0 is the light intensity before the interaction with the particle, R is the distance between the particle and the observer, θ is the scattering angle, λ is the wavelength of light under consideration, n is the refractive index of the particle, and d is the diameter of the particle.

It can be seen from the above equation that Rayleigh scattering is strongly dependent upon the size of the particle and the wavelengths. The intensity of the Rayleigh scattered radiation increases rapidly as the ratio of particle size to wavelength increases. Furthermore, the intensity of Rayleigh scattered radiation is identical in the forward and reverse directions.

The Rayleigh scattering model breaks down when the particle size becomes larger than around 10% of the wavelength of the incident radiation. In the case of particles with dimensions greater than this, Mie's scattering model can be used to find the intensity of the scattered radiation. The intensity of Mie scattered radiation is given by the summation of an infinite series of terms rather than by a simple mathematical expression. It can be shown, however, that scattering in this range of particle sizes differs from Rayleigh scattering in several respects: it is roughly independent of wavelength and it is larger in the forward direction than in the reverse direction. The greater the particle size, the more of the light is scattered in the forward direction.

The blue colour of the sky results from Rayleigh scattering, as the size of the gas particles in the atmosphere is much smaller than the wavelength of visible light. Rayleigh scattering is much greater for blue light than for other colours due to its shorter wavelength. As sunlight passes through the atmosphere, its blue component is Rayleigh scattered strongly by atmospheric gases but the longer wavelength (e.g. red/yellow) components are not. The sunlight arriving directly from the Sun therefore appears to be slightly yellow, while the light scattered through rest of the sky appears blue. During sunrises and sunsets, the effect of Rayleigh scattering on the spectrum of the transmitted light is much greater due to the greater distance the light rays have to travel through the high-density air near the Earth's surface.

In contrast, the water droplets that make up clouds are of a comparable size to the wavelengths in visible light, and the scattering is described by Mie's model rather than that of Rayleigh. Here, all wavelengths of visible light are scattered approximately identically, and the clouds therefore appear to be white or grey.

Rayleigh–Gans approximation edit

The Rayleigh–Gans approximation is an approximate solution to light scattering when the relative refractive index of the particle is close to that of the environment, and its size is much smaller in comparison to the wavelength of light divided by |n − 1|, where n is the refractive index:[3]

 

where   is the wavevector of the light ( ), and   refers to the linear dimension of the particle. The former condition is often referred as optically soft and the approximation holds for particles of arbitrary shape.[3]

Anomalous diffraction approximation of van de Hulst edit

The anomalous diffraction approximation is valid for large (compared to wavelength) and optically soft spheres; soft in the context of optics implies that the refractive index of the particle (m) differs only slightly from the refractive index of the environment, and the particle subjects the wave to only a small phase shift. The extinction efficiency in this approximation is given by

 

where Q is the efficiency factor of scattering, which is defined as the ratio of the scattering cross-section and geometrical cross-section πa2.

The term p = 4πa(n − 1)/λ has as its physical meaning the phase delay of the wave passing through the centre of the sphere, where a is the sphere radius, n is the ratio of refractive indices inside and outside of the sphere, and λ the wavelength of the light.

This set of equations was first described by van de Hulst in (1957).[5]

Mathematics edit

 
Scattering of the plane wave, incidence direction is parallel to the z-axis, polarization is parallel to the x-axis, nanoparticle's radius is a

The scattering by a spherical nanoparticle is solved exactly regardless of the particle size. We consider scattering by a plane wave propagating along the z-axis polarized along the x-axis. Dielectric and magnetic permeabilities of a particle are   and  , and   and   for the environment.

In order to solve the scattering problem,[3] we write first the solutions of the vector Helmholtz equation in spherical coordinates, since the fields inside and outside the particles must satisfy it. Helmholtz equation:

 

In addition to the Helmholtz equation, the fields must satisfy the conditions   and  ,  . Vector spherical harmonics possess all the necessary properties, introduced as follows:

  — magnetic harmonics (TE),
  — electric harmonics (TM),

where

 
 

and   — Associated Legendre polynomials, and   — any of the spherical Bessel functions.

Next, we expand the incident plane wave in vector spherical harmonics:

 

Here the superscript   means that in the radial part of the functions   are spherical Bessel functions of the first kind. The expansion coefficients are obtained by taking integrals of the form

 

In this case, all coefficients at   are zero, since the integral over the angle   in the numerator is zero.

Then the following conditions are imposed:

  1. Interface conditions on the boundary between the sphere and the environment (which allow us to relate the expansion coefficients of the incident, internal, and scattered fields)
  2. The condition that the solution is bounded at the origin (therefore, in the radial part of the generating functions  , spherical Bessel functions of the first kind are selected for the internal field),
  3. For a scattered field, the asymptotics at infinity corresponds to a diverging spherical wave (in connection with this, for the scattered field in the radial part of the generating functions   spherical Hankel functions of the first kind are chosen).

Scattered fields are written in terms of a vector harmonic expansion as

 
 

Here the superscript   means that in the radial part of the functions   are spherical Hankel functions of the first kind (those of the second kind would have  ), and  ,

Internal fields:

 
 

  is the wave vector outside the particle   is the wave vector in the medium from the particle material,   and   are the refractive indices of the medium and the particle.

After applying the interface conditions, we obtain expressions for the coefficients:

 
 
 
 

where

 
  with   being the radius of the sphere.

  and   represent the spherical functions of Bessel and Hankel of the first kind, respectively.

Scattering and extinction cross-sections edit

 
Multipole decomposition spectrum of scattering cross-section by gold nanosphere with radius 100 nm
 
Multipole decomposition spectrum of scattering cross-section by nanosphere with radius 100 nm and refractive index n=4
 
Multipole decomposition spectrum of scattering cross-section by silicon nanosphere with radius 100 nm

Values commonly calculated using Mie theory include efficiency coefficients for extinction  , scattering  , and absorption  .[6][7] These efficiency coefficients are ratios of the cross section of the respective process,  , to the particle protected area,  , where a is the particle radius. According to the definition of extinction,

  and  .

The scattering and extinction coefficients can be represented as the infinite series:

 
 

The contributions in these sums, indexed by n, correspond to the orders of a multipole expansion with n = 1 being the dipole term, n = 2 being the quadrapole term, and so forth.

Application to larger particles edit

If the size of the particle is equal to several wavelengths in the material, then the scattered fields have some features. Further, we will talk about the form of the electric field since the magnetic field is obtained from it by taking the curl.

All Mie coefficients depend on the frequency and have maximums when the denominator is close to zero (exact equality to zero is achieved for complex frequencies). In this case, it is possible, that the contribution of one specific harmonic dominates in scattering. Then at large distances from the particle, the radiation pattern of the scattered field will be similar to the corresponding radiation pattern of the angular part of vector spherical harmonics. The harmonics   correspond to electric dipoles (if the contribution of this harmonic dominates in the expansion of the electric field, then the field is similar to the electric dipole field),   correspond to the electric field of the magnetic dipole,   and   - electric and magnetic quadrupoles,   and   - octupoles, and so on. The maxima of the scattering coefficients (as well as the change of their phase to  ) are called multipole resonances, and zeros can be called anapoles.

The dependence of the scattering cross-section on the wavelength and the contribution of specific resonances strongly depends on the particle material. For example, for a gold particle with a radius of 100 nm, the contribution of the electric dipole to scattering predominates in the optical range, while for a silicon particle there are pronounced magnetic dipole and quadrupole resonances. For metal particles, the peak visible in the scattering cross-section is also called localized plasmon resonance.

In the limit of small particles or long wavelengths, the electric dipole contribution dominates in the scattering cross-section.

Other directions of the incident plane wave edit

In case of x-polarized plane wave, incident along the z-axis, decompositions of all fields contained only harmonics with m= 1, but for an arbitrary incident wave this is not the case.[8] For a rotated plane wave, the expansion coefficients can be obtained, for example, using the fact that during rotation, vector spherical harmonics are transformed through each other by Wigner D-matrixes.

In this case, the scattered field will be decomposed by all possible harmonics:

 

Then the scattering cross section will be expressed in terms of the coefficients as follows:[9]

 

Kerker effect edit

The Kerker effect is a phenomenon in scattering directionality, which occurs when different multipole responses are presented and not negligible.

 
Particular (dipolar) case of the Kerker effect. The total electric field of the crossed magnetic and electric dipoles radiating in phase. The radiation pattern is asymmetric, in one direction the fields are mutually destroyed, and in the other, they add up.

In 1983, in the work of Kerker, Wang and Giles,[10] the direction of scattering by particles with   was investigated. In particular, it was shown that for hypothetical particles with   backward scattering is completely suppressed. This can be seen as an extension to a spherical surface of Giles' and Wild's results for reflection at a planar surface with equal refractive indices where reflection and transmission is constant and independent of angle of incidence.[11]

In addition, scattering cross sections in the forward and backward directions are simply expressed in terms of Mie coefficients:[12][13]

 

For certain combinations of coefficients, the expressions above can be minimized.

So, for example, when terms with   can be neglected (dipole approximation),  , corresponds to the minimum in backscattering (magnetic and electric dipoles are equal in magnitude and are in phase, this is also called first Kerker or zero-backward intensity condition[14]). And   corresponds to minimum in forward scattering, this is also called second Kerker condition (or near-zero forward intensity condition). From the optical theorem, it is shown that for a passive particle   is not possible.[15] For the exact solution of the problem, it is necessary to take into account the contributions of all multipoles. The sum of the electric and magnetic dipoles forms Huygens source [16]

For dielectric particles, maximum forward scattering is observed at wavelengths longer than the wavelength of magnetic dipole resonance, and maximum backward scattering at shorter ones.[17]

Later, other varieties of the effect were found. For example, the transverse Kerker effect, with nearly complete simultaneous suppression of both forward and backward scattered fields (side-scattering patterns),[18] optomechanical Kerker effect,[19] in acoustic scattering,[20] and also found in plants.[21]

There is also a short Video on YouTube with an explanation of the effect.

Dyadic Green's function of a sphere edit

Green's function is a solution to the following equation:

 

where   — identity matrix   for  , and   for  . Since all fields are vectorial, the Green function is a 3 by 3 matrix and is called a dyadic. If polarization   is induced in the system, when the fields are written as

 

In the same way as the fields, the Green's function can be decomposed into vector spherical harmonics.[22] Dyadic Green's function of a free space а:[23]

 

In the presence of a sphere, the Green's function is also decomposed into vector spherical harmonics. Its appearance depends on the environment in which the points   and   are located.[24]

When both points are outside the sphere ( ):

 

where the coefficients are :

 

When both points are inside the sphere ( ) :

 

Coefficients:

 

Source is inside the sphere and observation point is outside ( ):

 

coefficients:

 

Source is outside the sphere and observation point is inside ( ) :

 

coefficients:

 

Computational codes edit

Mie solutions are implemented in a number of programs written in different computer languages such as Fortran, MATLAB, and Mathematica. These solutions approximate an infinite series, and provide as output the calculation of the scattering phase function, extinction, scattering, and absorption efficiencies, and other parameters such as asymmetry parameters or radiation torque. Current usage of the term "Mie solution" indicates a series approximation to a solution of Maxwell's equations. There are several known objects that allow such a solution: spheres, concentric spheres, infinite cylinders, clusters of spheres and clusters of cylinders. There are also known series solutions for scattering by ellipsoidal particles. A list of codes implementing these specialized solutions is provided in the following:

A generalization that allows a treatment of more generally shaped particles is the T-matrix method, which also relies on a series approximation to solutions of Maxwell's equations.

See also external links for other codes and calculators.

Applications edit

Mie theory is very important in meteorological optics, where diameter-to-wavelength ratios of the order of unity and larger are characteristic for many problems regarding haze and cloud scattering. A further application is in the characterization of particles by optical scattering measurements. The Mie solution is also important for understanding the appearance of common materials like milk, biological tissue and latex paint.

Atmospheric science edit

Mie scattering occurs when the diameters of atmospheric particulates are similar to or larger than the wavelengths of the light. Dust, pollen, smoke and microscopic water droplets that form clouds are common causes of Mie scattering. Mie scattering occurs mostly in the lower portions of the atmosphere, where larger particles are more abundant, and dominates in cloudy conditions.

Cancer detection and screening edit

Mie theory has been used to determine whether scattered light from tissue corresponds to healthy or cancerous cell nuclei using angle-resolved low-coherence interferometry.

Clinical laboratory analysis edit

Mie theory is a central principle in the application of nephelometric based assays, widely used in medicine to measure various plasma proteins. A wide array of plasma proteins can be detected and quantified by nephelometry.

Magnetic particles edit

A number of unusual electromagnetic scattering effects occur for magnetic spheres. When the relative permittivity equals the permeability, the back-scatter gain is zero. Also, the scattered radiation is polarized in the same sense as the incident radiation. In the small-particle (or long-wavelength) limit, conditions can occur for zero forward scatter, for complete polarization of scattered radiation in other directions, and for asymmetry of forward scatter to backscatter. The special case in the small-particle limit provides interesting special instances of complete polarization and forward-scatter-to-backscatter asymmetry.[10]

Metamaterial edit

Mie theory has been used to design metamaterials. They usually consist of three-dimensional composites of metal or non-metallic inclusions periodically or randomly embedded in a low-permittivity matrix. In such a scheme, the negative constitutive parameters are designed to appear around the Mie resonances of the inclusions: the negative effective permittivity is designed around the resonance of the Mie electric dipole scattering coefficient, whereas negative effective permeability is designed around the resonance of the Mie magnetic dipole scattering coefficient, and doubly negative material (DNG) is designed around the overlap of resonances of Mie electric and magnetic dipole scattering coefficients. The particle usually have the following combinations:

  1. one set of magnetodielectric particles with values of relative permittivity and permeability much greater than one and close to each other;
  2. two different dielectric particles with equal permittivity but different size;
  3. two different dielectric particles with equal size but different permittivity.

In theory, the particles analyzed by Mie theory are commonly spherical but, in practice, particles are usually fabricated as cubes or cylinders for ease of fabrication. To meet the criteria of homogenization, which may be stated in the form that the lattice constant is much smaller than the operating wavelength, the relative permittivity of the dielectric particles should be much greater than 1, e.g.   to achieve negative effective permittivity (permeability).[25][26][27]

Particle sizing edit

Mie theory is often applied in laser diffraction analysis to inspect the particle sizing effect.[28] While early computers in the 1970s were only able to compute diffraction data with the more simple Fraunhofer approximation, Mie is widely used since the 1990s and officially recommended for particles below 50 micrometers in guideline ISO 13320:2009.[29]

Mie theory has been used in the detection of oil concentration in polluted water.[30][31]

Mie scattering is the primary method of sizing single sonoluminescing bubbles of air in water[32][33][34] and is valid for cavities in materials, as well as particles in materials, as long as the surrounding material is essentially non-absorbing.

Parasitology edit

It has also been used to study the structure of Plasmodium falciparum, a particularly pathogenic form of malaria.[35]

Extensions edit

In 1986, P. A. Bobbert and J. Vlieger extended the Mie model to calculate scattering by a sphere in a homogeneous medium placed on flat surface. Like Mie model, the extended model can be applied to spheres with a radius close to the wavelength of the incident light.[36] There is a C++ code implementing Bobbert–Vlieger (BV) model.[37] Recent developments are related to scattering by ellipsoid.[38][39][40] The contemporary studies go to well known research of Rayleigh.[41]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hahn, David W. (July 2009). "Light Scattering Theory" (PDF). University of Florida. Retrieved 2017-09-22.
  2. ^ Stratton, J. A. (1941). Electromagnetic Theory. New York: McGraw-Hill.
  3. ^ a b c d Bohren, C. F.; Huffmann, D. R. (2010). Absorption and scattering of light by small particles. New York: Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 978-3-527-40664-7.
  4. ^ Mie, Gustav (1908). "Beiträge zur Optik trüber Medien, speziell kolloidaler Metallösungen". Annalen der Physik. 330 (3): 377–445. Bibcode:1908AnP...330..377M. doi:10.1002/andp.19083300302. English translation 2005-05-05 at the Wayback Machine, .
  5. ^ a b van de Hulst, H. C. (1957). Light scattering by small particles. New York: John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 9780486139753.
  6. ^ Survikov ST (2011). "Mie Scattering". A-to-Z Guide to Thermodynamics, Heat and Mass Transfer, and Fluids Engineering. Begel House. doi:10.1615/AtoZ.m.mie_scattering. ISBN 978-0-8493-9356-3. Retrieved 28 Jan 2019. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  7. ^ Ye Z, Jiang X, Wang Z (Oct 2012). (PDF). Journal of Software. 7 (10): 2309–2316. doi:10.4304/JSW.7.10.2309-2316. S2CID 833509. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-01-28.
  8. ^ K. A. Fuller, "Scattering and absorption cross sections of compounded spheres. I. Theory for external aggregation", J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 11, 3251–3260 (1994)
  9. ^ K. Frizyuk, I. Volkovskaya, D. Smirnova, A. Poddubny, M. Petrov, "Second-harmonic generation in Mie-resonant dielectric nanoparticles made of noncentrosymmetric materials", Phys. Rev. B 99, 075425 (2019)
  10. ^ a b Kerker, M.; Wang, D.-S.; Giles, C. L. (1983). "Electromagnetic scattering by magnetic spheres" (PDF). Journal of the Optical Society of America. 73 (6): 765. doi:10.1364/JOSA.73.000765. ISSN 0030-3941.
  11. ^ C. L. Giles, W. J. Wild, "Fresnel Reflection and Transmission at a Planar Boundary from Media of Equal Refractive Indices", Applied Physics Letters, 40, 210–212, 1982
  12. ^ Tzarouchis, D.; Sihvola, A. "Light Scattering by a Dielectric Sphere: Perspectives on the Mie Resonances". Appl. Sci. 2018, 8, 184.
  13. ^ Wei Liu and Yuri S. Kivshar, "Generalized Kerker effects in nanophotonics and meta-optics [Invited]", Opt. Express 26, 13085–13105 (2018)
  14. ^ Geffrin, J. M., B. García-Cámara, R. Gómez-Medina, P. Albella, L. S. Froufe-Pérez, C. Eyraud, A. Litman, et al. "Magnetic and Electric Coherence in Forward- and Back-Scattered Electromagnetic Waves by a Single Dielectric Subwavelength Sphere". Nature Communications 3, no. 1 (6 November 2012): 1171. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2167.
  15. ^ Rahimzadegan, Aso, et al. "Minimalist Mie coefficient model." Optics express 28.11 (2020): 16511-16525. https://doi.org/10.1364/OE.390331
  16. ^ W. Chen, Q. Yang, Yu. Chen, W. Liu. "Global Mie Scattering". arXiv:2003.04114 [physics.optics]
  17. ^ Fu, Y., Kuznetsov, A., Miroshnichenko, A. et al. "Directional visible light scattering by silicon nanoparticles". Nat Commun 4, 1527 (2013) doi:10.1038/ncomms2538
  18. ^ Shamkhi, Hadi K., K. V. Baryshnikova, A. Sayanskiy, P. Kapitanova, P. D. Terekhov, P. Belov, A. Karabchevsky, A. B. Evlyukhin, Yu. Kivshar, and A. S. Shalin. "Transverse Scattering and Generalized Kerker Effects in All-Dielectric Mie-Resonant Metaoptics". Physical Review Letters 122, no. 19 (17 May 2019): 193905. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.122.193905.
  19. ^ Poshakinskiy, A. V., and A. N. Poddubny. "Optomechanical Kerker Effect". Physical Review X 9, no. 1 (15 January 2019): 011008. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.9.011008.
  20. ^ Wei, Lei, and Francisco J. Rodríguez-Fortuño. "Far-Field and near-Field Directionality in Acoustic Scattering". New Journal of Physics 22, no. 8 (August 2020): 083016. https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/ab9fbf.
  21. ^ Barhom, Hani, Andrey A. Machnev, Roman E. Noskov, Alexander Goncharenko, Egor A. Gurvitz, Alexander S. Timin, Vitaliy A. Shkoldin, et al. "Biological Kerker Effect Boosts Light Collection Efficiency in Plants". Nano Letters 19, no. 10 (9 October 2019): 7062–71. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b02540
  22. ^ L.-W. Li, P.-S. Kooi, M.-S. Leong, and T.-S. Yee. Electromagnetic dyadic green’s function in spherically multilayered media. IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, 42(12):2302-2310, Dec 1994.
  23. ^ C. T. Tai, Dyadic Green’s Functions in Electromagnetic Theory. Scranton, PA: lntext Educational, 1971.
  24. ^ Mason, V. Bradford, The Electromagnetic Radiation From Simple Sources in the Presence of a Homogeneous Dielectric Sphere, Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan (1972)
  25. ^ Holloway, C. L.; Kuester, E. F.; Baker-Jarvis, J.; Kabos, P. (2003). "A double negative (DNG) composite medium composed of magnetodielectric spherical particles embedded in a matrix". IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation. 51 (10): 2596–2603. Bibcode:2003ITAP...51.2596H. doi:10.1109/TAP.2003.817563.
  26. ^ Zhao, Q.; Zhou, J.; Zhang, F. L.; Lippens, D. (2009). "Mie resonance-based dielectric metamaterials". Materials Today. 12 (12): 60–69. doi:10.1016/S1369-7021(09)70318-9. hdl:20.500.12210/50359.
  27. ^ Li, Y.; Bowler, N. (2012). "Traveling waves on three-dimensional periodic arrays of two different magnetodielectric spheres arbitrarily arranged on a simple tetragonal lattice". IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation. 60 (6): 2727–2739. Bibcode:2012ITAP...60.2727L. doi:10.1109/tap.2012.2194637. S2CID 21023639.
  28. ^ Vaziri, M. R.; et al. (2017). "Investigating the extrinsic size effect of palladium and gold spherical nanoparticles". Optical Materials. 64: 413–420. Bibcode:2017OptMa..64..413R. doi:10.1016/j.optmat.2017.01.014.
  29. ^ "ISO 13320:2009 - Particle size analysis -- Laser diffraction methods". www.iso.org. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  30. ^ He, L; Kear-Padilla, L. L.; Lieberman, S. H.; Andrews, J. M. (2003). "Rapid in situ determination of total oil concentration in water using ultraviolet fluorescence and light scattering coupled with artificial neural networks". Analytica Chimica Acta. 478 (2): 245. doi:10.1016/S0003-2670(02)01471-X.
  31. ^ Lindner, H; Fritz, Gerhard; Glatter, Otto (2001). "Measurements on Concentrated Oil in Water Emulsions Using Static Light Scattering". Journal of Colloid and Interface Science. 242 (1): 239. Bibcode:2001JCIS..242..239L. doi:10.1006/jcis.2001.7754.
  32. ^ Gaitan, D. Felipe; Lawrence A. Crum; Charles C. Church; Ronald A. Roy (1992). "Sonoluminescence and bubble dynamics for a single, stable, cavitation bubble". The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 91 (6): 3166. Bibcode:1992ASAJ...91.3166G. doi:10.1121/1.402855. S2CID 122235287.
  33. ^ Lentz, W. J.; Atchley, Anthony A.; Gaitan, D. Felipe (May 1995). "Mie scattering from a sonoluminescing air bubble in water". Applied Optics. 34 (15): 2648–54. Bibcode:1995ApOpt..34.2648L. doi:10.1364/AO.34.002648. PMID 21052406. S2CID 1798670.
  34. ^ Gompf, B.; Pecha, R. (May 2000). "Mie scattering from a sonoluminescing bubble with high spatial and temporal resolution". Physical Review E. 61 (5): 5253–5256. Bibcode:2000PhRvE..61.5253G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevE.61.5253. PMID 11031573.
  35. ^ Serebrennikova, Yulia M.; Patel, Janus; Garcia-Rubio, Luis H. (2010). "Interpretation of the ultraviolet-visible spectra of malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum". Applied Optics. 49 (2): 180–8. Bibcode:2010ApOpt..49..180S. doi:10.1364/AO.49.000180. PMID 20062504.
  36. ^ Bobbert, P. A.; Vlieger, J. (1 July 1986). "Light scattering by a sphere on a substrate". Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and Its Applications. 137 (1): 209–242. Bibcode:1986PhyA..137..209B. doi:10.1016/0378-4371(86)90072-5.
  37. ^ "SCATMECH: Bobbert_Vlieger_BRDF_Model". pml.nist.gov. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
  38. ^ Muratov, R. Z. (2015). Multipoles and Fields of the Ellipsoid. Moscow: MISiS Publisher. p. 524. ISBN 978-5-600-01057-4.
  39. ^ Efimov, S. P.; Muratov, R. Z. (1978). "Interference Theorems of Scattering Theory in the Vector Problems of Low-frequency Diffraction". Sov. Phys. Dokl. 23 (8): 558–560. Bibcode:1978SPhD...23..556A.
  40. ^ Muratov, R. Z.; Efimov, S. P. (1978). "Low frequency scattering of a plane wave by an acoustically soft ellipsoid". Radiophysics and Quantum Electronics. 21 (2): 153–160. Bibcode:1978R&QE...21..153M. doi:10.1007/BF01078707. S2CID 118762566.
  41. ^ Lord Rayleigh (1897). "On the incidence of aerial and electric waves upon small obstacles in the form of ellipsoids or elliptic cylinders, and on the passage of electric waves through a circular aperture in a conducting screen". The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. Series 5. 44 (266): 28. doi:10.1080/14786449708621026.

Further reading edit

  • Kerker, M. (1969). The scattering of light and other electromagnetic radiation. New York: Academic.
  • Barber, P. W.; Hill, S. S. (1990). Light scattering by particles: Computational methods. Singapore: World Scientific. ISBN 978-9971-5-0813-5.
  • Mishchenko, M.; Travis, L.; Lacis, A. (2002). Scattering, Absorption, and Emission of Light by Small Particles. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-78252-4.
  • Frisvad, J.; Christensen, N.; Jensen, H. (2007). "Computing the Scattering Properties of Participating Media using Lorenz-Mie Theory" (PDF). ACM Transactions on Graphics. 26 (3): 60. doi:10.1145/1276377.1276452.
  • Wriedt, Thomas (2008). "Mie theory 1908, on the mobile phone 2008". Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy & Radiative Transfer. 109 (8): 1543–1548. Bibcode:2008JQSRT.109.1543W. doi:10.1016/j.jqsrt.2008.01.009.
  • Lorenz, Ludvig (1890). "Lysbevægelsen i og uden for en af plane Lysbølger belyst Kugle". Det Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskabs Skrifter. 6 (6): 1–62.

External links edit

  • SCATTERLIB and scattport.org are collections of light scattering codes with implementations of Mie solutions in FORTRAN, C++, IDL, Pascal, Mathematica and Mathcad
  • (2D C++ code to calculate the analytical fields around an infinite cylinder, developed by Jeffrey M. McMahon)
  • . Mie scattering software for Windows.
  • STRATIFY MatLab code of scattering from multilayered spheres in cases where the source is a point dipole and a plane wave. Description in arXiv:2006.06512
  • Scattnlay, an open-source C++ Mie solution package with Python and JavaScript wrappers. Provides far-field and near-field simulation results for multilayered spheres.
  • Online Mie scattering calculator provides simulation of scattering properties (including multipole decomposition) and near-field maps for bulk, core-shell, and multilayer spheres. Material parameters include all nk-data files from refractiveindex.info website. The source code is part of Scattnlay project.
  • Online Mie solution calculator is available, with documentation in German and English.
  • Online Mie scattering calculator produces beautiful graphs over a range of parameters.
  • Online Mie scattering calculator written on PHP.
  • mediated light diffusion and random lasing.
  • Mie solution for spherical particles.
  • PyMieScatt, a Mie solution package written in Python.
  • pyMieForAll, an open-source C++ Mie solution package with Python wrapper.

scattering, electromagnetism, solution, maxwell, equations, also, known, lorenz, solution, lorenz, debye, solution, describes, scattering, electromagnetic, plane, wave, homogeneous, sphere, solution, takes, form, infinite, series, spherical, multipole, partial. In electromagnetism the Mie solution to Maxwell s equations also known as the Lorenz Mie solution the Lorenz Mie Debye solution or Mie scattering describes the scattering of an electromagnetic plane wave by a homogeneous sphere The solution takes the form of an infinite series of spherical multipole partial waves It is named after German physicist Gustav Mie Mie scattering as particle diameter changes from 0 1 wavelengths to 1 wavelength The sphere s refractive index is 1 5 Mie scattering artistic view Linearly polarized incident plane wave scattered by octupolar resonance Mie resonances vs radius Monostatic radar cross section RCS of a perfectly conducting metal sphere as a function of frequency calculated by Mie theory In the low frequency Rayleigh scattering limit where the circumference is less than the wavelength the normalized RCS is s p R 2 9 k R 4 displaystyle tfrac sigma pi R 2 sim 9 kR 4 In the high frequency optical limit s p R 2 1 displaystyle tfrac sigma pi R 2 sim 1 The term Mie solution is also used for solutions of Maxwell s equations for scattering by stratified spheres or by infinite cylinders or other geometries where one can write separate equations for the radial and angular dependence of solutions The term Mie theory is sometimes used for this collection of solutions and methods it does not refer to an independent physical theory or law More broadly the Mie scattering formulas are most useful in situations where the size of the scattering particles is comparable to the wavelength of the light rather than much smaller or much larger Mie scattering sometimes referred to as a non molecular scattering or aerosol particle scattering takes place in the lower 4 500 m 15 000 ft of the atmosphere where many essentially spherical particles with diameters approximately equal to the wavelength of the incident ray may be present Mie scattering theory has no upper size limitation and converges to the limit of geometric optics for large particles 1 Contents 1 Introduction 2 Approximations 2 1 Rayleigh approximation scattering 2 2 Rayleigh Gans approximation 2 3 Anomalous diffraction approximation of van de Hulst 3 Mathematics 3 1 Scattering and extinction cross sections 3 2 Application to larger particles 3 3 Other directions of the incident plane wave 4 Kerker effect 5 Dyadic Green s function of a sphere 6 Computational codes 7 Applications 7 1 Atmospheric science 7 2 Cancer detection and screening 7 3 Clinical laboratory analysis 7 4 Magnetic particles 7 5 Metamaterial 7 6 Particle sizing 7 7 Parasitology 8 Extensions 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksIntroduction edit nbsp Angular part of magnetic and electric vector spherical harmonics Red and green arrows show the direction of the field Generating scalar functions are also presented only the first three orders are shown dipoles quadrupoles octupoles A modern formulation of the Mie solution to the scattering problem on a sphere can be found in many books e g J A Stratton s Electromagnetic Theory 2 In this formulation the incident plane wave as well as the scattering field is expanded into radiating spherical vector spherical harmonics The internal field is expanded into regular vector spherical harmonics By enforcing the boundary condition on the spherical surface the expansion coefficients of the scattered field can be computed For particles much larger or much smaller than the wavelength of the scattered light there are simple and accurate approximations that suffice to describe the behavior of the system But for objects whose size is within a few orders of magnitude of the wavelength e g water droplets in the atmosphere latex particles in paint droplets in emulsions including milk and biological cells and cellular components a more detailed approach is necessary 3 The Mie solution 4 is named after its developer German physicist Gustav Mie Danish physicist Ludvig Lorenz and others independently developed the theory of electromagnetic plane wave scattering by a dielectric sphere The formalism allows the calculation of the electric and magnetic fields inside and outside a spherical object and is generally used to calculate either how much light is scattered the total optical cross section or where it goes the form factor The notable features of these results are the Mie resonances sizes that scatter particularly strongly or weakly 5 This is in contrast to Rayleigh scattering for small particles and Rayleigh Gans Debye scattering after Lord Rayleigh Richard Gans and Peter Debye for large particles The existence of resonances and other features of Mie scattering makes it a particularly useful formalism when using scattered light to measure particle size Approximations editRayleigh approximation scattering edit Main article Rayleigh scattering nbsp The change of sky colour at sunset red nearest the sun blue furthest away is caused by Rayleigh scattering by atmospheric gas particles which are much smaller than the wavelengths of visible light The grey white colour of the clouds is caused by Mie scattering by water droplets which are of a comparable size to the wavelengths of visible light Rayleigh scattering describes the elastic scattering of light by spheres that are much smaller than the wavelength of light The intensity I of the scattered radiation is given by I I 0 1 cos 2 8 2 R 2 2 p l 4 n 2 1 n 2 2 2 d 2 6 displaystyle I I 0 left frac 1 cos 2 theta 2R 2 right left frac 2 pi lambda right 4 left frac n 2 1 n 2 2 right 2 left frac d 2 right 6 nbsp where I0 is the light intensity before the interaction with the particle R is the distance between the particle and the observer 8 is the scattering angle l is the wavelength of light under consideration n is the refractive index of the particle and d is the diameter of the particle It can be seen from the above equation that Rayleigh scattering is strongly dependent upon the size of the particle and the wavelengths The intensity of the Rayleigh scattered radiation increases rapidly as the ratio of particle size to wavelength increases Furthermore the intensity of Rayleigh scattered radiation is identical in the forward and reverse directions The Rayleigh scattering model breaks down when the particle size becomes larger than around 10 of the wavelength of the incident radiation In the case of particles with dimensions greater than this Mie s scattering model can be used to find the intensity of the scattered radiation The intensity of Mie scattered radiation is given by the summation of an infinite series of terms rather than by a simple mathematical expression It can be shown however that scattering in this range of particle sizes differs from Rayleigh scattering in several respects it is roughly independent of wavelength and it is larger in the forward direction than in the reverse direction The greater the particle size the more of the light is scattered in the forward direction The blue colour of the sky results from Rayleigh scattering as the size of the gas particles in the atmosphere is much smaller than the wavelength of visible light Rayleigh scattering is much greater for blue light than for other colours due to its shorter wavelength As sunlight passes through the atmosphere its blue component is Rayleigh scattered strongly by atmospheric gases but the longer wavelength e g red yellow components are not The sunlight arriving directly from the Sun therefore appears to be slightly yellow while the light scattered through rest of the sky appears blue During sunrises and sunsets the effect of Rayleigh scattering on the spectrum of the transmitted light is much greater due to the greater distance the light rays have to travel through the high density air near the Earth s surface In contrast the water droplets that make up clouds are of a comparable size to the wavelengths in visible light and the scattering is described by Mie s model rather than that of Rayleigh Here all wavelengths of visible light are scattered approximately identically and the clouds therefore appear to be white or grey Rayleigh Gans approximation edit The Rayleigh Gans approximation is an approximate solution to light scattering when the relative refractive index of the particle is close to that of the environment and its size is much smaller in comparison to the wavelength of light divided by n 1 where n is the refractive index 3 n 1 1 k d n 1 1 displaystyle begin aligned n 1 amp ll 1 kd n 1 amp ll 1 end aligned nbsp where k textstyle k nbsp is the wavevector of the light k 2 p l textstyle k frac 2 pi lambda nbsp and d displaystyle d nbsp refers to the linear dimension of the particle The former condition is often referred as optically soft and the approximation holds for particles of arbitrary shape 3 Anomalous diffraction approximation of van de Hulst edit The anomalous diffraction approximation is valid for large compared to wavelength and optically soft spheres soft in the context of optics implies that the refractive index of the particle m differs only slightly from the refractive index of the environment and the particle subjects the wave to only a small phase shift The extinction efficiency in this approximation is given by Q 2 4 p sin p 4 p 2 1 cos p displaystyle Q 2 frac 4 p sin p frac 4 p 2 1 cos p nbsp where Q is the efficiency factor of scattering which is defined as the ratio of the scattering cross section and geometrical cross section pa2 The term p 4pa n 1 l has as its physical meaning the phase delay of the wave passing through the centre of the sphere where a is the sphere radius n is the ratio of refractive indices inside and outside of the sphere and l the wavelength of the light This set of equations was first described by van de Hulst in 1957 5 Mathematics edit nbsp Scattering of the plane wave incidence direction is parallel to the z axis polarization is parallel to the x axis nanoparticle s radius is a The scattering by a spherical nanoparticle is solved exactly regardless of the particle size We consider scattering by a plane wave propagating along the z axis polarized along the x axis Dielectric and magnetic permeabilities of a particle are e 1 displaystyle varepsilon 1 nbsp and m 1 displaystyle mu 1 nbsp and e displaystyle varepsilon nbsp and m displaystyle mu nbsp for the environment In order to solve the scattering problem 3 we write first the solutions of the vector Helmholtz equation in spherical coordinates since the fields inside and outside the particles must satisfy it Helmholtz equation 2 E k 2 E 0 2 H k 2 H 0 displaystyle nabla 2 mathbf E k 2 mathbf E 0 quad nabla 2 mathbf H k 2 mathbf H 0 nbsp In addition to the Helmholtz equation the fields must satisfy the conditions E H 0 displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf E nabla cdot mathbf H 0 nbsp and E i w m H displaystyle nabla times mathbf E i omega mu mathbf H nbsp H i w e E displaystyle nabla times mathbf H i omega varepsilon mathbf E nbsp Vector spherical harmonics possess all the necessary properties introduced as follows M o e m n r ps o e m n displaystyle mathbf M e o mn nabla times left mathbf r psi e o mn right nbsp magnetic harmonics TE N o e m n M o e m n k displaystyle mathbf N e o mn frac nabla times mathbf M e o mn k nbsp electric harmonics TM where ps e m n cos m f P n m cos ϑ z n k r displaystyle psi emn cos m varphi P n m cos vartheta z n k r nbsp ps o m n sin m f P n m cos ϑ z n k r displaystyle psi omn sin m varphi P n m cos vartheta z n k r nbsp and P n m cos 8 displaystyle P n m cos theta nbsp Associated Legendre polynomials and z n k r displaystyle z n k r nbsp any of the spherical Bessel functions Next we expand the incident plane wave in vector spherical harmonics E i n c E 0 e i k r cos 8 e x E 0 n 1 i n 2 n 1 n n 1 M o 1 n 1 k r i N e 1 n 1 k r H i n c k w m E 0 n 1 i n 2 n 1 n n 1 M e 1 n 1 k r i N o 1 n 1 k r displaystyle begin aligned mathbf E inc amp E 0 e ikr cos theta mathbf e x E 0 sum n 1 infty i n frac 2n 1 n n 1 left mathbf M o1n 1 k mathbf r i mathbf N e1n 1 k mathbf r right mathbf H inc amp frac k omega mu E 0 sum n 1 infty i n frac 2n 1 n n 1 left mathbf M e1n 1 k mathbf r i mathbf N o1n 1 k mathbf r right end aligned nbsp Here the superscript 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp means that in the radial part of the functions ps o e m n displaystyle psi e o mn nbsp are spherical Bessel functions of the first kind The expansion coefficients are obtained by taking integrals of the form 0 2 p 0 p E i n c M o e m n 1 sin 8 d 8 d f 0 2 p 0 p M o e m n 1 2 sin 8 d 8 d f displaystyle frac int 0 2 pi int 0 pi mathbf E inc cdot mathbf M e o mn 1 sin theta d theta d varphi int 0 2 pi int 0 pi left mathbf M e o mn 1 right 2 sin theta d theta d varphi nbsp In this case all coefficients at m 1 displaystyle m neq 1 nbsp are zero since the integral over the angle f displaystyle varphi nbsp in the numerator is zero Then the following conditions are imposed Interface conditions on the boundary between the sphere and the environment which allow us to relate the expansion coefficients of the incident internal and scattered fields The condition that the solution is bounded at the origin therefore in the radial part of the generating functions ps o e m n displaystyle psi e o mn nbsp spherical Bessel functions of the first kind are selected for the internal field For a scattered field the asymptotics at infinity corresponds to a diverging spherical wave in connection with this for the scattered field in the radial part of the generating functions ps o e m n displaystyle psi e o mn nbsp spherical Hankel functions of the first kind are chosen Scattered fields are written in terms of a vector harmonic expansion as E s n 1 E n i a n N e 1 n 3 k r b n M o 1 n 3 k r displaystyle mathbf E s sum n 1 infty E n left ia n mathbf N e1n 3 k mathbf r b n mathbf M o1n 3 k mathbf r right nbsp H s k w m n 1 E n a n M e 1 n 3 k r i b n N o 1 n 3 k r displaystyle mathbf H s frac k omega mu sum n 1 infty E n left a n mathbf M e1n 3 k mathbf r ib n mathbf N o1n 3 k mathbf r right nbsp Here the superscript 3 displaystyle 3 nbsp means that in the radial part of the functions ps o e m n displaystyle psi e o mn nbsp are spherical Hankel functions of the first kind those of the second kind would have 4 displaystyle 4 nbsp and E n i n E 0 2 n 1 n n 1 displaystyle E n frac i n E 0 2n 1 n n 1 nbsp Internal fields E 1 n 1 E n i d n N e 1 n 1 k 1 r c n M o 1 n 1 k 1 r displaystyle mathbf E 1 sum n 1 infty E n left id n mathbf N e1n 1 k 1 mathbf r c n mathbf M o1n 1 k 1 mathbf r right nbsp H 1 k 1 w m 1 n 1 E n d n M e 1 n 1 k 1 r i c n N o 1 n 1 k 1 r displaystyle mathbf H 1 frac k 1 omega mu 1 sum n 1 infty E n left d n mathbf M e1n 1 k 1 mathbf r ic n mathbf N o1n 1 k 1 mathbf r right nbsp k w c n textstyle k frac omega c n nbsp is the wave vector outside the particle k 1 w c n 1 textstyle k 1 frac omega c n 1 nbsp is the wave vector in the medium from the particle material n displaystyle n nbsp and n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp are the refractive indices of the medium and the particle After applying the interface conditions we obtain expressions for the coefficients c n w m 1 r h n r j n r m 1 r j n r h n r m 1 r h n r j n r 1 m r 1 j n r 1 h n r displaystyle c n omega frac mu 1 left rho h n rho right j n rho mu 1 left rho j n rho right h n rho mu 1 left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 mu left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho nbsp d n w m 1 n 1 n r h n r j n r m 1 n 1 n r j n r h n r m n 1 2 r h n r j n r 1 m 1 n 2 r 1 j n r 1 h n r displaystyle d n omega frac mu 1 n 1 n left rho h n rho right j n rho mu 1 n 1 n left rho j n rho right h n rho mu n 1 2 left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 mu 1 n 2 left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho nbsp b n w m 1 r j n r j n r 1 m r 1 j n r 1 j n r m 1 r h n r j n r 1 m r 1 j n r 1 h n r displaystyle b n omega frac mu 1 left rho j n rho right j n rho 1 mu left rho 1 j n rho 1 right j n rho mu 1 left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 mu left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho nbsp a n w m n 1 2 r j n r j n r 1 m 1 n 2 r 1 j n r 1 j n r m n 1 2 r h n r j n r 1 m 1 n 2 r 1 j n r 1 h n r displaystyle a n omega frac mu n 1 2 left rho j n rho right j n rho 1 mu 1 n 2 left rho 1 j n rho 1 right j n rho mu n 1 2 left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 mu 1 n 2 left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho nbsp where r k a displaystyle rho ka nbsp r 1 k 1 a displaystyle rho 1 k 1 a nbsp with a displaystyle a nbsp being the radius of the sphere j n displaystyle j n nbsp and h n displaystyle h n nbsp represent the spherical functions of Bessel and Hankel of the first kind respectively Scattering and extinction cross sections edit nbsp Multipole decomposition spectrum of scattering cross section by gold nanosphere with radius 100 nm nbsp Multipole decomposition spectrum of scattering cross section by nanosphere with radius 100 nm and refractive index n 4 nbsp Multipole decomposition spectrum of scattering cross section by silicon nanosphere with radius 100 nm Values commonly calculated using Mie theory include efficiency coefficients for extinction Q e displaystyle Q e nbsp scattering Q s displaystyle Q s nbsp and absorption Q a displaystyle Q a nbsp 6 7 These efficiency coefficients are ratios of the cross section of the respective process s i displaystyle sigma i nbsp to the particle protected area Q i s i p a 2 displaystyle Q i frac sigma i pi a 2 nbsp where a is the particle radius According to the definition of extinction s e s s s a displaystyle sigma e sigma s sigma a nbsp and Q e Q s Q a displaystyle Q e Q s Q a nbsp The scattering and extinction coefficients can be represented as the infinite series Q s 2 k 2 a 2 n 1 2 n 1 a n 2 b n 2 displaystyle Q s frac 2 k 2 a 2 sum n 1 infty 2n 1 left a n 2 b n 2 right nbsp Q e 2 k 2 a 2 n 1 2 n 1 ℜ a n b n displaystyle Q e frac 2 k 2 a 2 sum n 1 infty 2n 1 Re a n b n nbsp The contributions in these sums indexed by n correspond to the orders of a multipole expansion with n 1 being the dipole term n 2 being the quadrapole term and so forth Application to larger particles edit If the size of the particle is equal to several wavelengths in the material then the scattered fields have some features Further we will talk about the form of the electric field since the magnetic field is obtained from it by taking the curl All Mie coefficients depend on the frequency and have maximums when the denominator is close to zero exact equality to zero is achieved for complex frequencies In this case it is possible that the contribution of one specific harmonic dominates in scattering Then at large distances from the particle the radiation pattern of the scattered field will be similar to the corresponding radiation pattern of the angular part of vector spherical harmonics The harmonics N o e m 1 displaystyle mathbf N e o m1 nbsp correspond to electric dipoles if the contribution of this harmonic dominates in the expansion of the electric field then the field is similar to the electric dipole field M o e m 1 displaystyle mathbf M e o m1 nbsp correspond to the electric field of the magnetic dipole N o e m 2 displaystyle mathbf N e o m2 nbsp and M o e m 2 displaystyle mathbf M e o m2 nbsp electric and magnetic quadrupoles N o e m 3 displaystyle mathbf N e o m3 nbsp and M o e m 3 displaystyle mathbf M e o m3 nbsp octupoles and so on The maxima of the scattering coefficients as well as the change of their phase to p displaystyle pi nbsp are called multipole resonances and zeros can be called anapoles The dependence of the scattering cross section on the wavelength and the contribution of specific resonances strongly depends on the particle material For example for a gold particle with a radius of 100 nm the contribution of the electric dipole to scattering predominates in the optical range while for a silicon particle there are pronounced magnetic dipole and quadrupole resonances For metal particles the peak visible in the scattering cross section is also called localized plasmon resonance In the limit of small particles or long wavelengths the electric dipole contribution dominates in the scattering cross section Other directions of the incident plane wave edit In case of x polarized plane wave incident along the z axis decompositions of all fields contained only harmonics with m 1 but for an arbitrary incident wave this is not the case 8 For a rotated plane wave the expansion coefficients can be obtained for example using the fact that during rotation vector spherical harmonics are transformed through each other by Wigner D matrixes In this case the scattered field will be decomposed by all possible harmonics E s n 1 m 0 n E 0 D M e m n M e m n 3 k r D M o m n M o m n 3 k r D N e m n N e m n 3 k r D N o m n N o m n 3 k r displaystyle mathbf E s sum n 1 infty sum m 0 n E 0 D Memn mathbf M emn 3 k mathbf r D Momn mathbf M omn 3 k mathbf r D Nemn mathbf N emn 3 k mathbf r D Nomn mathbf N omn 3 k mathbf r nbsp Then the scattering cross section will be expressed in terms of the coefficients as follows 9 C s c a 2 p p a 2 k 2 n 1 n n 1 2 n 1 m 1 n n m n m D M e m n 2 D M o m n 2 D N e m n 2 D N o m n 2 2 D M e 0 n 2 2 D N e 0 n 2 displaystyle C sca frac 2 pi pi a 2 k 2 sum n 1 infty frac n n 1 2n 1 times left sum limits m 1 n frac n m n m left D Memn 2 D Momn 2 D Nemn 2 D Nomn 2 right 2 D Me0n 2 2 D Ne0n 2 right nbsp Kerker effect editThe Kerker effect is a phenomenon in scattering directionality which occurs when different multipole responses are presented and not negligible nbsp Particular dipolar case of the Kerker effect The total electric field of the crossed magnetic and electric dipoles radiating in phase The radiation pattern is asymmetric in one direction the fields are mutually destroyed and in the other they add up In 1983 in the work of Kerker Wang and Giles 10 the direction of scattering by particles with m 1 displaystyle mu neq 1 nbsp was investigated In particular it was shown that for hypothetical particles with m e displaystyle mu varepsilon nbsp backward scattering is completely suppressed This can be seen as an extension to a spherical surface of Giles and Wild s results for reflection at a planar surface with equal refractive indices where reflection and transmission is constant and independent of angle of incidence 11 In addition scattering cross sections in the forward and backward directions are simply expressed in terms of Mie coefficients 12 13 C s c a backward 1 a 2 k 2 n 1 2 n 1 1 n a n b n 2 C s c a forward 1 a 2 k 2 n 1 2 n 1 a n b n 2 displaystyle begin aligned C sca text backward amp frac 1 a 2 k 2 left sum n 1 infty 2n 1 1 n a n b n right 2 C sca text forward amp frac 1 a 2 k 2 left sum n 1 infty 2n 1 a n b n right 2 end aligned nbsp For certain combinations of coefficients the expressions above can be minimized So for example when terms with n gt 1 displaystyle n gt 1 nbsp can be neglected dipole approximation a 1 b 1 0 displaystyle a 1 b 1 0 nbsp corresponds to the minimum in backscattering magnetic and electric dipoles are equal in magnitude and are in phase this is also called first Kerker or zero backward intensity condition 14 And a 1 b 1 0 displaystyle a 1 b 1 0 nbsp corresponds to minimum in forward scattering this is also called second Kerker condition or near zero forward intensity condition From the optical theorem it is shown that for a passive particle a 1 b 1 displaystyle a 1 b 1 nbsp is not possible 15 For the exact solution of the problem it is necessary to take into account the contributions of all multipoles The sum of the electric and magnetic dipoles forms Huygens source 16 For dielectric particles maximum forward scattering is observed at wavelengths longer than the wavelength of magnetic dipole resonance and maximum backward scattering at shorter ones 17 Later other varieties of the effect were found For example the transverse Kerker effect with nearly complete simultaneous suppression of both forward and backward scattered fields side scattering patterns 18 optomechanical Kerker effect 19 in acoustic scattering 20 and also found in plants 21 There is also a short Video on YouTube with an explanation of the effect Dyadic Green s function of a sphere editGreen s function is a solution to the following equation G w r r w c 2 e r w G w r r 1 d r r displaystyle nabla times nabla times bf hat G omega mathbf r mathbf r left frac omega c right 2 varepsilon mathbf r omega bf hat G omega mathbf r mathbf r bf hat 1 delta mathbf r mathbf r nbsp where 1 displaystyle hat bf 1 nbsp identity matrix e r w e 1 w displaystyle varepsilon mathbf r omega varepsilon 1 omega nbsp for r lt a displaystyle r lt a nbsp and e r w e displaystyle varepsilon mathbf r omega varepsilon nbsp for r gt a displaystyle r gt a nbsp Since all fields are vectorial the Green function is a 3 by 3 matrix and is called a dyadic If polarization P r displaystyle mathbf P mathbf r nbsp is induced in the system when the fields are written as E w r w 2 m V d V G r r k P w r displaystyle mathbf E omega mathbf r omega 2 mu int limits V dV hat bf G bf r r k mathbf P omega mathbf r nbsp In the same way as the fields the Green s function can be decomposed into vector spherical harmonics 22 Dyadic Green s function of a free space a 23 G 0 r r k e r e r k 2 d r r i k 4 p n 1 m 0 n 2 d m 0 2 n 1 n n 1 n m n m M e m n 1 k r M e m n 3 k r M o m n 1 k r M o m n 3 k r N e m n 1 k r N e m n 3 k r N o m n 1 k r N o m n 3 k r if r lt r M e m n 3 k r M e m n 1 k r M o m n 3 k r M o m n 1 k r N e m n 3 k r N e m n 1 k r N o m n 3 k r N o m n 1 k r if r gt r displaystyle begin aligned amp hat bf G 0 mathbf r mathbf r k amp frac mathbf e r otimes mathbf e r k 2 delta mathbf r mathbf r frac ik 4 pi sum n 1 infty sum m 0 n 2 delta m 0 frac 2n 1 n n 1 frac n m n m cdot amp quad begin cases left left mathbf M emn 1 k mathbf r otimes mathbf M emn 3 k mathbf r mathbf M omn 1 k mathbf r otimes mathbf M omn 3 k mathbf r right left mathbf N emn 1 k mathbf r otimes mathbf N emn 3 k mathbf r mathbf N omn 1 k mathbf r otimes mathbf N omn 3 k mathbf r right right amp text if r lt r left left mathbf M emn 3 k mathbf r otimes mathbf M emn 1 k mathbf r mathbf M omn 3 k mathbf r otimes mathbf M omn 1 k mathbf r right left mathbf N emn 3 k mathbf r otimes mathbf N emn 1 k mathbf r mathbf N omn 3 k mathbf r otimes mathbf N omn 1 k mathbf r right right amp text if r gt r end cases end aligned nbsp In the presence of a sphere the Green s function is also decomposed into vector spherical harmonics Its appearance depends on the environment in which the points r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp and r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp are located 24 When both points are outside the sphere r gt a r gt a displaystyle r gt a r gt a nbsp G 00 r r k k 1 G 0 r r k i k 4 p n 1 m 0 n 2 d m 0 2 n 1 n n 1 n m n m a n 0 w M o e m n 3 k r M o e m n 3 k r b n 0 w N o e m n 3 k r N o e m n 3 k r displaystyle begin aligned amp hat bf G 00 mathbf r mathbf r k k 1 amp hat bf G 0 mathbf r mathbf r k frac ik 4 pi sum n 1 infty sum m 0 n 2 delta m 0 frac 2n 1 n n 1 frac n m n m cdot amp quad left a n 0 omega left mathbf M e o mn 3 k mathbf r otimes mathbf M e o mn 3 k mathbf r right b n 0 omega left mathbf N e o mn 3 k mathbf r otimes mathbf N e o mn 3 k mathbf r right right end aligned nbsp where the coefficients are a n 0 w m m 1 r 1 j n r 1 j n r r j n r j n r 1 r h n r j n r 1 m m 1 r 1 j n r 1 h n r b n 0 w n 2 m 1 m r 1 j n r 1 j n r n 1 2 r j n r j n r 1 n 1 2 r h n r j n r 1 n 2 m 1 m r 1 j n r 1 h n r displaystyle begin aligned a n 0 omega amp frac mu mu 1 left rho 1 j n rho 1 right j n rho left rho j n rho right j n rho 1 left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 mu mu 1 left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho b n 0 omega amp frac n 2 mu 1 mu left rho 1 j n rho 1 right j n rho n 1 2 left rho j n rho right j n rho 1 n 1 2 left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 n 2 mu 1 mu left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho end aligned nbsp When both points are inside the sphere r lt a r lt a displaystyle r lt a r lt a nbsp G 11 r r k k 1 G 0 r r k 1 i k 1 4 p n 1 m 0 n 2 d m 0 2 n 1 n n 1 n m n m c n 1 w M o e m n 1 k 1 r M o e m n 1 k 1 r d n 1 w N o e m n 1 k 1 r N o e m n 1 k 1 r displaystyle begin aligned amp hat bf G 11 mathbf r mathbf r k k 1 amp hat bf G 0 mathbf r mathbf r k 1 frac ik 1 4 pi sum n 1 infty sum m 0 n 2 delta m 0 frac 2n 1 n n 1 frac n m n m cdot amp quad left c n 1 omega left mathbf M e o mn 1 k 1 mathbf r otimes mathbf M e o mn 1 k 1 mathbf r right d n 1 omega left mathbf N e o mn 1 k 1 mathbf r otimes mathbf N e o mn 1 k 1 mathbf r right right end aligned nbsp Coefficients c n 1 w m 1 m r h n r h n r 1 r 1 h n r 1 h n r r 1 j n r 1 h n r m 1 m r h n r j n r 1 d n 1 w n 1 2 m m 1 r h n r h n r 1 n 2 r 1 h n r 1 h n r n 2 r 1 j n r 1 h n r n 1 2 m m 1 r h n r j n r 1 displaystyle begin aligned c n 1 omega amp frac mu 1 mu left rho h n rho right h n rho 1 left rho 1 h n rho 1 right h n rho left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho mu 1 mu left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 d n 1 omega amp frac n 1 2 mu mu 1 left rho h n rho right h n rho 1 n 2 left rho 1 h n rho 1 right h n rho n 2 left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho n 1 2 mu mu 1 left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 end aligned nbsp Source is inside the sphere and observation point is outside r gt a r lt a displaystyle r gt a r lt a nbsp G 01 r r k k 1 i k 1 4 p n 1 m 0 n 2 d m 0 2 n 1 n n 1 n m n m a n 1 w M o e m n 3 k r M o e m n 1 k 1 r b n 1 w N o e m n 3 k r N o e m n 1 k 1 r displaystyle begin aligned amp hat bf G 01 mathbf r mathbf r k k 1 amp frac ik 1 4 pi sum n 1 infty sum m 0 n 2 delta m 0 frac 2n 1 n n 1 frac n m n m cdot amp quad left a n 1 omega mathbf M e o mn 3 k mathbf r otimes mathbf M e o mn 1 k 1 mathbf r b n 1 omega left mathbf N e o mn 3 k mathbf r otimes mathbf N e o mn 1 k 1 mathbf r right right end aligned nbsp coefficients a n 1 w r 1 j n r 1 h n r 1 r 1 h n r 1 j n r 1 r 1 j n r 1 h n r m 1 m r h n r j n r 1 b n 1 w n n 1 r 1 j n r 1 h n r 1 n n 1 r 1 h n r 1 j n r 1 n 2 m 1 m r 1 j n r 1 h n r n 1 2 r h n r j n r 1 displaystyle begin aligned a n 1 omega amp frac left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho 1 left rho 1 h n rho 1 right j n rho 1 left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho mu 1 mu left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 b n 1 omega amp frac nn 1 left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho 1 nn 1 left rho 1 h n rho 1 right j n rho 1 n 2 mu 1 mu left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho n 1 2 left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 end aligned nbsp Source is outside the sphere and observation point is inside r lt a r gt a displaystyle r lt a r gt a nbsp G 10 r r k k 1 i k 4 p n 1 m 0 n 2 d m 0 2 n 1 n n 1 n m n m c n 0 w M o e m n 1 k r M o e m n 3 k 1 r d n 0 w N o e m n 1 k r N o e m n 3 k 1 r displaystyle begin aligned amp hat bf G 10 mathbf r mathbf r k k 1 amp frac ik 4 pi sum n 1 infty sum m 0 n 2 delta m 0 frac 2n 1 n n 1 frac n m n m cdot amp quad left c n 0 omega mathbf M e o mn 1 k mathbf r otimes mathbf M e o mn 3 k 1 mathbf r d n 0 omega mathbf N e o mn 1 k mathbf r otimes mathbf N e o mn 3 k 1 mathbf r right end aligned nbsp coefficients c n 0 w r h n r j n r r j n r h n r r h n r j n r 1 m m 1 r 1 j n r 1 h n r d n 0 w n n 1 r h n r j n r n n 1 r j n r h n r n 1 2 m m 1 r h n r j n r 1 n 2 r 1 j n r 1 j n r displaystyle begin aligned c n 0 omega amp frac left rho h n rho right j n rho left rho j n rho right h n rho left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 mu mu 1 left rho 1 j n rho 1 right h n rho d n 0 omega amp frac nn 1 left rho h n rho right j n rho nn 1 left rho j n rho right h n rho n 1 2 mu mu 1 left rho h n rho right j n rho 1 n 2 left rho 1 j n rho 1 right j n rho end aligned nbsp Computational codes editMie solutions are implemented in a number of programs written in different computer languages such as Fortran MATLAB and Mathematica These solutions approximate an infinite series and provide as output the calculation of the scattering phase function extinction scattering and absorption efficiencies and other parameters such as asymmetry parameters or radiation torque Current usage of the term Mie solution indicates a series approximation to a solution of Maxwell s equations There are several known objects that allow such a solution spheres concentric spheres infinite cylinders clusters of spheres and clusters of cylinders There are also known series solutions for scattering by ellipsoidal particles A list of codes implementing these specialized solutions is provided in the following Codes for electromagnetic scattering by spheres solutions for a single sphere coated spheres multilayer sphere and cluster of spheres Codes for electromagnetic scattering by cylinders solutions for a single cylinder multilayer cylinders and cluster of cylinders A generalization that allows a treatment of more generally shaped particles is the T matrix method which also relies on a series approximation to solutions of Maxwell s equations See also external links for other codes and calculators Applications editMie theory is very important in meteorological optics where diameter to wavelength ratios of the order of unity and larger are characteristic for many problems regarding haze and cloud scattering A further application is in the characterization of particles by optical scattering measurements The Mie solution is also important for understanding the appearance of common materials like milk biological tissue and latex paint Atmospheric science edit Mie scattering occurs when the diameters of atmospheric particulates are similar to or larger than the wavelengths of the light Dust pollen smoke and microscopic water droplets that form clouds are common causes of Mie scattering Mie scattering occurs mostly in the lower portions of the atmosphere where larger particles are more abundant and dominates in cloudy conditions Cancer detection and screening edit Mie theory has been used to determine whether scattered light from tissue corresponds to healthy or cancerous cell nuclei using angle resolved low coherence interferometry Clinical laboratory analysis edit Mie theory is a central principle in the application of nephelometric based assays widely used in medicine to measure various plasma proteins A wide array of plasma proteins can be detected and quantified by nephelometry Magnetic particles edit A number of unusual electromagnetic scattering effects occur for magnetic spheres When the relative permittivity equals the permeability the back scatter gain is zero Also the scattered radiation is polarized in the same sense as the incident radiation In the small particle or long wavelength limit conditions can occur for zero forward scatter for complete polarization of scattered radiation in other directions and for asymmetry of forward scatter to backscatter The special case in the small particle limit provides interesting special instances of complete polarization and forward scatter to backscatter asymmetry 10 Metamaterial edit Mie theory has been used to design metamaterials They usually consist of three dimensional composites of metal or non metallic inclusions periodically or randomly embedded in a low permittivity matrix In such a scheme the negative constitutive parameters are designed to appear around the Mie resonances of the inclusions the negative effective permittivity is designed around the resonance of the Mie electric dipole scattering coefficient whereas negative effective permeability is designed around the resonance of the Mie magnetic dipole scattering coefficient and doubly negative material DNG is designed around the overlap of resonances of Mie electric and magnetic dipole scattering coefficients The particle usually have the following combinations one set of magnetodielectric particles with values of relative permittivity and permeability much greater than one and close to each other two different dielectric particles with equal permittivity but different size two different dielectric particles with equal size but different permittivity In theory the particles analyzed by Mie theory are commonly spherical but in practice particles are usually fabricated as cubes or cylinders for ease of fabrication To meet the criteria of homogenization which may be stated in the form that the lattice constant is much smaller than the operating wavelength the relative permittivity of the dielectric particles should be much greater than 1 e g e r gt 78 38 displaystyle varepsilon text r gt 78 38 nbsp to achieve negative effective permittivity permeability 25 26 27 Particle sizing edit Mie theory is often applied in laser diffraction analysis to inspect the particle sizing effect 28 While early computers in the 1970s were only able to compute diffraction data with the more simple Fraunhofer approximation Mie is widely used since the 1990s and officially recommended for particles below 50 micrometers in guideline ISO 13320 2009 29 Mie theory has been used in the detection of oil concentration in polluted water 30 31 Mie scattering is the primary method of sizing single sonoluminescing bubbles of air in water 32 33 34 and is valid for cavities in materials as well as particles in materials as long as the surrounding material is essentially non absorbing Parasitology edit It has also been used to study the structure of Plasmodium falciparum a particularly pathogenic form of malaria 35 Extensions editIn 1986 P A Bobbert and J Vlieger extended the Mie model to calculate scattering by a sphere in a homogeneous medium placed on flat surface Like Mie model the extended model can be applied to spheres with a radius close to the wavelength of the incident light 36 There is a C code implementing Bobbert Vlieger BV model 37 Recent developments are related to scattering by ellipsoid 38 39 40 The contemporary studies go to well known research of Rayleigh 41 See also editCodes for electromagnetic scattering by spheres Computational electromagnetics Light scattering by particles List of atmospheric radiative transfer codes Optical properties of water and iceReferences edit Hahn David W July 2009 Light Scattering Theory PDF University of Florida Retrieved 2017 09 22 Stratton J A 1941 Electromagnetic Theory New York McGraw Hill a b c d Bohren C F Huffmann D R 2010 Absorption and scattering of light by small particles New York Wiley Interscience ISBN 978 3 527 40664 7 Mie Gustav 1908 Beitrage zur Optik truber Medien speziell kolloidaler Metallosungen Annalen der Physik 330 3 377 445 Bibcode 1908AnP 330 377M doi 10 1002 andp 19083300302 English translation Archived 2005 05 05 at the Wayback Machine American translation a b van de Hulst H C 1957 Light scattering by small particles New York John Wiley and Sons ISBN 9780486139753 Survikov ST 2011 Mie Scattering A to Z Guide to Thermodynamics Heat and Mass Transfer and Fluids Engineering Begel House doi 10 1615 AtoZ m mie scattering ISBN 978 0 8493 9356 3 Retrieved 28 Jan 2019 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Ye Z Jiang X Wang Z Oct 2012 Measurements of Particle Size Distribution Based on Mie Scattering Theory and Markov Chain Inversion Algorithm PDF Journal of Software 7 10 2309 2316 doi 10 4304 JSW 7 10 2309 2316 S2CID 833509 Archived from the original PDF on 2019 01 28 K A Fuller Scattering and absorption cross sections of compounded spheres I Theory for external aggregation J Opt Soc Am A 11 3251 3260 1994 K Frizyuk I Volkovskaya D Smirnova A Poddubny M Petrov Second harmonic generation in Mie resonant dielectric nanoparticles made of noncentrosymmetric materials Phys Rev B 99 075425 2019 a b Kerker M Wang D S Giles C L 1983 Electromagnetic scattering by magnetic spheres PDF Journal of the Optical Society of America 73 6 765 doi 10 1364 JOSA 73 000765 ISSN 0030 3941 C L Giles W J Wild Fresnel Reflection and Transmission at a Planar Boundary from Media of Equal Refractive Indices Applied Physics Letters 40 210 212 1982 Tzarouchis D Sihvola A Light Scattering by a Dielectric Sphere Perspectives on the Mie Resonances Appl Sci 2018 8 184 Wei Liu and Yuri S Kivshar Generalized Kerker effects in nanophotonics and meta optics Invited Opt Express 26 13085 13105 2018 Geffrin J M B Garcia Camara R Gomez Medina P Albella L S Froufe Perez C Eyraud A Litman et al Magnetic and Electric Coherence in Forward and Back Scattered Electromagnetic Waves by a Single Dielectric Subwavelength Sphere Nature Communications 3 no 1 6 November 2012 1171 https doi org 10 1038 ncomms2167 Rahimzadegan Aso et al Minimalist Mie coefficient model Optics express 28 11 2020 16511 16525 https doi org 10 1364 OE 390331 W Chen Q Yang Yu Chen W Liu Global Mie Scattering arXiv 2003 04114 physics optics Fu Y Kuznetsov A Miroshnichenko A et al Directional visible light scattering by silicon nanoparticles Nat Commun 4 1527 2013 doi 10 1038 ncomms2538 Shamkhi Hadi K K V Baryshnikova A Sayanskiy P Kapitanova P D Terekhov P Belov A Karabchevsky A B Evlyukhin Yu Kivshar and A S Shalin Transverse Scattering and Generalized Kerker Effects in All Dielectric Mie Resonant Metaoptics Physical Review Letters 122 no 19 17 May 2019 193905 https doi org 10 1103 PhysRevLett 122 193905 Poshakinskiy A V and A N Poddubny Optomechanical Kerker Effect Physical Review X 9 no 1 15 January 2019 011008 https doi org 10 1103 PhysRevX 9 011008 Wei Lei and Francisco J Rodriguez Fortuno Far Field and near Field Directionality in Acoustic Scattering New Journal of Physics 22 no 8 August 2020 083016 https doi org 10 1088 1367 2630 ab9fbf Barhom Hani Andrey A Machnev Roman E Noskov Alexander Goncharenko Egor A Gurvitz Alexander S Timin Vitaliy A Shkoldin et al Biological Kerker Effect Boosts Light Collection Efficiency in Plants Nano Letters 19 no 10 9 October 2019 7062 71 https doi org 10 1021 acs nanolett 9b02540 L W Li P S Kooi M S Leong and T S Yee Electromagnetic dyadic green s function in spherically multilayered media IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques 42 12 2302 2310 Dec 1994 C T Tai Dyadic Green s Functions in Electromagnetic Theory Scranton PA lntext Educational 1971 Mason V Bradford The Electromagnetic Radiation From Simple Sources in the Presence of a Homogeneous Dielectric Sphere Ph D Dissertation Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering The University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan 1972 Holloway C L Kuester E F Baker Jarvis J Kabos P 2003 A double negative DNG composite medium composed of magnetodielectric spherical particles embedded in a matrix IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation 51 10 2596 2603 Bibcode 2003ITAP 51 2596H doi 10 1109 TAP 2003 817563 Zhao Q Zhou J Zhang F L Lippens D 2009 Mie resonance based dielectric metamaterials Materials Today 12 12 60 69 doi 10 1016 S1369 7021 09 70318 9 hdl 20 500 12210 50359 Li Y Bowler N 2012 Traveling waves on three dimensional periodic arrays of two different magnetodielectric spheres arbitrarily arranged on a simple tetragonal lattice IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation 60 6 2727 2739 Bibcode 2012ITAP 60 2727L doi 10 1109 tap 2012 2194637 S2CID 21023639 Vaziri M R et al 2017 Investigating the extrinsic size effect of palladium and gold spherical nanoparticles Optical Materials 64 413 420 Bibcode 2017OptMa 64 413R doi 10 1016 j optmat 2017 01 014 ISO 13320 2009 Particle size analysis Laser diffraction methods www iso org Retrieved 2015 11 02 He L Kear Padilla L L Lieberman S H Andrews J M 2003 Rapid in situ determination of total oil concentration in water using ultraviolet fluorescence and light scattering coupled with artificial neural networks Analytica Chimica Acta 478 2 245 doi 10 1016 S0003 2670 02 01471 X Lindner H Fritz Gerhard Glatter Otto 2001 Measurements on Concentrated Oil in Water Emulsions Using Static Light Scattering Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 242 1 239 Bibcode 2001JCIS 242 239L doi 10 1006 jcis 2001 7754 Gaitan D Felipe Lawrence A Crum Charles C Church Ronald A Roy 1992 Sonoluminescence and bubble dynamics for a single stable cavitation bubble The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 91 6 3166 Bibcode 1992ASAJ 91 3166G doi 10 1121 1 402855 S2CID 122235287 Lentz W J Atchley Anthony A Gaitan D Felipe May 1995 Mie scattering from a sonoluminescing air bubble in water Applied Optics 34 15 2648 54 Bibcode 1995ApOpt 34 2648L doi 10 1364 AO 34 002648 PMID 21052406 S2CID 1798670 Gompf B Pecha R May 2000 Mie scattering from a sonoluminescing bubble with high spatial and temporal resolution Physical Review E 61 5 5253 5256 Bibcode 2000PhRvE 61 5253G doi 10 1103 PhysRevE 61 5253 PMID 11031573 Serebrennikova Yulia M Patel Janus Garcia Rubio Luis H 2010 Interpretation of the ultraviolet visible spectra of malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum Applied Optics 49 2 180 8 Bibcode 2010ApOpt 49 180S doi 10 1364 AO 49 000180 PMID 20062504 Bobbert P A Vlieger J 1 July 1986 Light scattering by a sphere on a substrate Physica A Statistical Mechanics and Its Applications 137 1 209 242 Bibcode 1986PhyA 137 209B doi 10 1016 0378 4371 86 90072 5 SCATMECH Bobbert Vlieger BRDF Model pml nist gov Retrieved 3 January 2017 Muratov R Z 2015 Multipoles and Fields of the Ellipsoid Moscow MISiS Publisher p 524 ISBN 978 5 600 01057 4 Efimov S P Muratov R Z 1978 Interference Theorems of Scattering Theory in the Vector Problems of Low frequency Diffraction Sov Phys Dokl 23 8 558 560 Bibcode 1978SPhD 23 556A Muratov R Z Efimov S P 1978 Low frequency scattering of a plane wave by an acoustically soft ellipsoid Radiophysics and Quantum Electronics 21 2 153 160 Bibcode 1978R amp QE 21 153M doi 10 1007 BF01078707 S2CID 118762566 Lord Rayleigh 1897 On the incidence of aerial and electric waves upon small obstacles in the form of ellipsoids or elliptic cylinders and on the passage of electric waves through a circular aperture in a conducting screen The London Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science Series 5 44 266 28 doi 10 1080 14786449708621026 Further reading editKerker M 1969 The scattering of light and other electromagnetic radiation New York Academic Barber P W Hill S S 1990 Light scattering by particles Computational methods Singapore World Scientific ISBN 978 9971 5 0813 5 Mishchenko M Travis L Lacis A 2002 Scattering Absorption and Emission of Light by Small Particles New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 78252 4 Frisvad J Christensen N Jensen H 2007 Computing the Scattering Properties of Participating Media using Lorenz Mie Theory PDF ACM Transactions on Graphics 26 3 60 doi 10 1145 1276377 1276452 Wriedt Thomas 2008 Mie theory 1908 on the mobile phone 2008 Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy amp Radiative Transfer 109 8 1543 1548 Bibcode 2008JQSRT 109 1543W doi 10 1016 j jqsrt 2008 01 009 Lorenz Ludvig 1890 Lysbevaegelsen i og uden for en af plane Lysbolger belyst Kugle Det Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskabs Skrifter 6 6 1 62 External links editSCATTERLIB and scattport org are collections of light scattering codes with implementations of Mie solutions in FORTRAN C IDL Pascal Mathematica and Mathcad JMIE 2D C code to calculate the analytical fields around an infinite cylinder developed by Jeffrey M McMahon ScatLab Mie scattering software for Windows STRATIFY MatLab code of scattering from multilayered spheres in cases where the source is a point dipole and a plane wave Description in arXiv 2006 06512 Scattnlay an open source C Mie solution package with Python and JavaScript wrappers Provides far field and near field simulation results for multilayered spheres Online Mie scattering calculator provides simulation of scattering properties including multipole decomposition and near field maps for bulk core shell and multilayer spheres Material parameters include all nk data files from refractiveindex info website The source code is part of Scattnlay project Online Mie solution calculator is available with documentation in German and English Online Mie scattering calculator produces beautiful graphs over a range of parameters phpMie Online Mie scattering calculator written on PHP Mie resonance mediated light diffusion and random lasing Mie solution for spherical particles PyMieScatt a Mie solution package written in Python pyMieForAll an open source C Mie solution package with Python wrapper Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mie scattering amp oldid 1221425558, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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