Abstract

Many planar structures, including multilayered media and periodic configurations of the optical-grating type, are capable of supporting an electromagnetic field of the leaky-wave form. By exciting this field, an incident light beam transfers a portion of its energy into the leaky-wave structure; after being guided longitudinally for a certain distance along the structure, this energy is leaked back to form part of the reflected beam. Owing to the longitudinal energy flow, the complete reflected beam exhibits a lateral displacement that appears either as a forward beam shift, similar to the Goos-Hanchen effect along a single dielectric interface, or as a backward beam shift, which has not been identified before. By deriving a general expression for the field excited by a gaussian light beam incident upon a leaky-wave structure, we find that the reflected beam may undergo a lateral displacement of the order of the beam width; the magnitude of this beam shift may therefore be much larger than the maximum shift produced at a single dielectric boundary. In the case of periodic structures, all of the higher-order diffracted beams are shifted laterally whenever the specularly reflected beam is displaced. The dependence of the lateral displacement on the beam width, the angle of incidence, and the leakage distance is examined in detail and the relevance of the beam shift to optical-beam couplers is discussed.

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