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Dive into the research topics where Gary Razinskas is active.

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Featured researches published by Gary Razinskas.


Nano Letters | 2012

Ultrafast Plasmon Propagation in Nanowires Characterized by Far-Field Spectral Interferometry

Christian Rewitz; Thomas Keitzl; Philip Tuchscherer; Jer-Shing Huang; Peter Geisler; Gary Razinskas; Bert Hecht; Tobias Brixner

Spectral interferometry is employed to fully characterize amplitude and phase of propagating plasmons that are transmitted through silver nanowires in the form of ultrashort pulses. For nanowire diameters below 100 nm, the plasmon group velocity is found to decrease drastically in accordance with the theory of adiabatic focusing. Furthermore, the dependence of the plasmon group velocity on the local nanowire environment is demonstrated. Our findings are of relevance for the design and implementation of nanoplasmonic signal processing and in view of coherent control applications.


Nano Letters | 2015

Nanoscale Confinement of All-Optical Magnetic Switching in TbFeCo - Competition with Nanoscale Heterogeneity

TianMin Liu; Tianhan Wang; A. H. Reid; M. Savoini; Xiaofei Wu; Benny Koene; Patrick Granitzka; Catherine Graves; Daniel Higley; Zhao Chen; Gary Razinskas; Markus Hantschmann; Andreas Scherz; J. Stöhr; A. Tsukamoto; Bert Hecht; A.V. Kimel; Andrei Kirilyuk; T.H.M. Rasing; H. A. Dürr

Single femtosecond optical laser pulses, of sufficient intensity, are demonstrated to reverse magnetization in a process known as all-optical switching. Gold two-wire antennas are placed on the all-optical switching film TbFeCo. These structures are resonant with the optical field, and they create a field enhancement in the near-field which confines the area where optical switching can occur. The magnetic switching that occurs around and below the antenna is imaged using resonant X-ray holography and magnetic circular dichroism. The results not only show the feasibility of controllable switching with antenna assistance but also demonstrate the highly inhomogeneous nature of the switching process, which is attributed to the process depending on the materials heterogeneity.


Contact Dermatitis | 1984

Patch testing in children (II). Results and case reports

Irmoard Pevny; Martin Brennenstuhl; Gary Razinskas

The results of 10 years of patch testing in children aged 3–16 years are reported. The commonest allergens found were nickel, cobalt, para‐dyes and chromate. 26 cases are recorded in detail.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Multimode plasmon excitation and in situ analysis in top-down fabricated nanocircuits.

Peter Geisler; Gary Razinskas; Enno Krauss; Xiaofei Wu; Christian Rewitz; Philip Tuchscherer; Sebastian Goetz; Chen-Bin Huang; Tobias Brixner; Bert Hecht

We experimentally demonstrate synthesis and in situ analysis of multimode plasmonic excitations in two-wire transmission lines supporting a symmetric and an antisymmetric eigenmode. To this end we irradiate an incoupling antenna with a diffraction-limited excitation spot exploiting a polarization- and position-dependent excitation efficiency. Modal analysis is performed by recording the far-field emission of two mode-specific spatially separated emission spots at the far end of the transmission line. To illustrate the power of the approach we selectively determine the group velocities of symmetric and antisymmetric contributions of a multimode ultrafast plasmon pulse.


Nano Letters | 2016

Electromechanically Tunable Suspended Optical Nanoantenna

Kai Chen; Gary Razinskas; Thorsten Feichtner; Swen Grossmann; Silke Christiansen; Bert Hecht

Coupling mechanical degrees of freedom with plasmonic resonances has potential applications in optomechanics, sensing, and active plasmonics. Here we demonstrate a suspended two-wire plasmonic nanoantenna acting like a nanoelectrometer. The antenna wires are supported and electrically connected via thin leads without disturbing the antenna resonance. As a voltage is applied, equal charges are induced on both antenna wires. The resulting equilibrium between the repulsive Coulomb force and the restoring elastic bending force enables us to precisely control the gap size. As a result the resonance wavelength and the field enhancement of the suspended optical nanoantenna can be reversibly tuned. Our experiments highlight the potential to realize large bandwidth optical nanoelectromechanical systems.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Robustness of plasmonic angular momentum confinement in cross resonant optical antennas

Peter Klaer; Gary Razinskas; Martin Lehr; Keno Krewer; F. Schertz; Xiaofei Wu; Bert Hecht; G. Schönhense; H. J. Elmers

Using a combination of photoemission electron microscopy and numerical simulations, we investigated the angular moment transfer in strongly enhanced optical near-fields of artificially fabricated optical antennas. The polarization dependence of the optical near-field enhancement has been measured in a maximum symmetric geometry, i.e., excitation by a normal incident planar wave. Finite-difference time-domain simulations for the realistic antenna geometries as determined by high-resolution electron microscopy reveal a very good agreement with experimental data. The agreement confirms that the geometrical asymmetries and inhomogeneities due to the nanoscale fabrication process preserve the circular polarization in the gap regions with strong near-field enhancement.


Optics Express | 2012

Spectral-interference microscopy for characterization of functional plasmonic elements

Christian Rewitz; Thomas Keitzl; Philip Tuchscherer; Sebastian Goetz; Peter Geisler; Gary Razinskas; Bert Hecht; Tobias Brixner

Plasmonic modes supported by noble-metal nanostructures offer strong subwavelength electric-field confinement and promise the realization of nanometer-scale integrated optical circuits with well-defined functionality. In order to measure the spectral and spatial response functions of such plasmonic elements, we combine a confocal microscope setup with spectral interferometry detection. The setup, data acquisition, and data evaluation are discussed in detail by means of exemplary experiments involving propagating plasmons transmitted through silver nanowires. By considering and experimentally calibrating any setup-inherent signal delay with an accuracy of 1 fs, we are able to extract correct timing information of propagating plasmons. The method can be applied, e.g., to determine the dispersion and group velocity of propagating plasmons in nanostructures, and can be extended towards the investigation of nonlinear phenomena.


Nano Letters | 2017

On-Chip Single-Plasmon Nanocircuit Driven by a Self-Assembled Quantum Dot

Xiaofei Wu; Ping Jiang; Gary Razinskas; Yongheng Huo; Hongyi Zhang; M. Kamp; Armando Rastelli; Oliver G. Schmidt; Bert Hecht; Klas Lindfors; Markus Lippitz

Quantum photonics holds great promise for future technologies such as secure communication, quantum computation, quantum simulation, and quantum metrology. An outstanding challenge for quantum photonics is to develop scalable miniature circuits that integrate single-photon sources, linear optical components, and detectors on a chip. Plasmonic nanocircuits will play essential roles in such developments. However, for quantum plasmonic circuits, integration of stable, bright, and narrow-band single photon sources in the structure has so far not been reported. Here we present a plasmonic nanocircuit driven by a self-assembled GaAs quantum dot. Through a planar dielectric-plasmonic hybrid waveguide, the quantum dot efficiently excites narrow-band single plasmons that are guided in a two-wire transmission line until they are converted into single photons by an optical antenna. Our work demonstrates the feasibility of fully on-chip plasmonic nanocircuits for quantum optical applications.


Optics Express | 2014

Shaping and spatiotemporal characterization of sub-10-fs pulses focused by a high-NA objective

Monika Pawłowska; Sebastian Goetz; Christian Dreher; Matthias Wurdack; Enno Krauss; Gary Razinskas; Peter Geisler; Bert Hecht; Tobias Brixner

We describe a setup consisting of a 4f pulse shaper and a microscope with a high-NA objective lens and discuss the aspects most relevant for an undistorted spatiotemporal profile of the focused beam. We demonstrate shaper-assisted pulse compression in focus to a sub-10-fs duration using phase-resolved interferometric spectral modulation (PRISM). We introduce a nanostructure-based method for sub-diffraction spatiotemporal characterization of strongly focused pulses. The distortions caused by optical aberrations and space-time coupling from the shaper can be reduced by careful setup design and alignment to about 10 nm in space and 1 fs in time.


ACS Photonics | 2017

Transmission of Plasmons through a Nanowire

Peter Geisler; Enno Krauss; Gary Razinskas; Bert Hecht

Exact quantitative understanding of plasmon propagation along nanowires is mandatory for designing and creating functional devices. Here we investigate plasmon transmission through top-down-fabricated monocrystalline gold nanowires on a glass substrate. We show that the transmission through finite-length nanowires can be described by Fabry–Perot oscillations that beat with free-space propagating light launched at the incoupling end. Using an extended Fabry–Perot model, experimental and simulated length-dependent transmission signals agree quantitatively with a fully analytical model.

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Bert Hecht

University of Würzburg

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Xiaofei Wu

University of Bayreuth

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Tobias Brixner

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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H. A. Dürr

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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A. H. Reid

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Andreas Scherz

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Daniel Higley

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Patrick Granitzka

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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