Micro, Nano, and Molecular Systems Article 2000

Phenomenological damping in optical response tensors

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Although perturbation theory applied to the optical response of a molecule or material system is only strictly valid far from resonances, it is often applied to ``near-resonance{''} conditions by means of complex energies incorporating damping. Inconsistent signs of the damping in optical response tensors have appeared in the recent literature, as have errors in the treatment of the perturbation by a static held. The ``equal-sign{''} convention used in a recent publication yields an unphysical material response, and Koroteev's intimation that linear electro-optical circular dichroism may exist in an optically active liquid under resonance conditions is also flawed. We show that the isotropic part of the Pockels tensor vanishes.

Author(s): Buckingham, AD and Fischer, Peer
Journal: PHYSICAL REVIEW A
Volume: 61
Number (issue): 3
Year: 2000
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.61.035801
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive

BibTex

@article{ISI:000085836300128,
  title = {Phenomenological damping in optical response tensors},
  journal = {PHYSICAL REVIEW A},
  abstract = {Although perturbation theory applied to the optical response of a molecule or material system is only strictly valid far from resonances, it is often applied to ``near-resonance{''} conditions by means of complex energies incorporating damping. Inconsistent signs of the damping in optical response tensors have appeared in the recent literature, as have errors in the treatment of the perturbation by a static held. The ``equal-sign{''} convention used in a recent publication yields an unphysical material response, and Koroteev's intimation that linear electro-optical circular dichroism may exist in an optically active liquid under resonance conditions is also flawed. We show that the isotropic part of the Pockels tensor vanishes.},
  volume = {61},
  number = {3},
  year = {2000},
  slug = {isi-000085836300128},
  author = {Buckingham, AD and Fischer, Peer}
}