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Yuri S. Kivshar

Researcher at Australian National University

Publications -  1876
Citations -  94737

Yuri S. Kivshar is an academic researcher from Australian National University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nonlinear system & Metamaterial. The author has an hindex of 126, co-authored 1845 publications receiving 79415 citations. Previous affiliations of Yuri S. Kivshar include Technische Universität Darmstadt & Los Alamos National Laboratory.

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Wave scattering and splitting by magnetic metamaterials

TL;DR: A range of novel phenomena including partial focusing and splitting into multiple transmitted beams are observed and it is demonstrated that while some of these experimentally observed effects can be described within the approximation of an effective medium, a deeper understanding of the experimental results requires a rigorous study of internal eigenmodes of the lattice of resonators.
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Simple and efficient generation of gap solitons in Bose-Einstein condensates

TL;DR: In this article, an efficient method for generating matter-wave gap solitons in a repulsive Bose-Einstein condensate was proposed, in which the gap soliton is formed from a condense cloud in a harmonic trap after turning on a one-dimensional optical lattice.
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Fano resonance in quadratic waveguide arrays.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied resonant light scattering in arrays of channel optical waveguides in which tunable quadratic nonlinearity is introduced as nonlinear defects by periodic poling of single (or several) waveguiders in the array.
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Spatial coherence singularities and incoherent vortex solitons

TL;DR: Swartzlander et al. as discussed by the authors used the Australian Research Council and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation to support the work of Swartzlander and his co-authors.
Posted Content

Towards all-dielectric metamaterials and nanophotonics

TL;DR: In this paper, the Mie resonances of high-index dielectric nanoparticles have been studied for controlling both magnetic and electric response of structured matter by engineering the MIE resonances in high index dielectrics.