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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.

Papers
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Magnetic and Electric Hotspots with Silicon Nanodimers

TL;DR: For the first time, hotspots of the magnetic field at visible wavelengths for light polarized across the nanodimer's primary axis are observed using near-field scanning optical microscopy.
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Self-focusing and transverse instabilities of solitary waves

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss self-focusing of spatial optical solitons in diffractive nonlinear media due to either transverse (one more unbounded spatial dimension) or modulational (induced by temporal wave dispersion) instabilities, in the framework of the cubic nonlinear Schrodinger equation and its generalizations.
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Active Tuning of All-Dielectric Metasurfaces

TL;DR: Dynamic tuning of electric and magnetic resonances in all-dielectric silicon nanodisk metasurfaces in the telecom spectral range based on the temperature-dependent refractive-index change of a nematic liquid crystal is experimentally demonstrated.
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Individual nanoantennas empowered by bound states in the continuum for nonlinear photonics

TL;DR: In this article, an isolated subwavelength nanoresonator hosting a quasi-BIC resonance was constructed from AlGaAs material on an engineered substrate, and the resonator was used as a nonlinear nanoantenna and demonstrated record-high efficiency of second-harmonic generation.
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Wire metamaterials: physics and applications.

TL;DR: The physics and applications of a broad class of artificial electromagnetic materials composed of lattices of aligned metal rods embedded in a dielectric matrix are reviewed, including a wire medium possessing extreme optical anisotropy.