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Autores principales: Sureshkumar, Abhishek, Perin, Georges, Lapeyre, Julien, Bernard, Rozenn, Terrien, Kelig, Dudoux, Bertrand, Haboucha, Adil, Ollivier, Hélène, Dumeige, Yannick, Trebaol, Stéphane
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2026
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.08255
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author Sureshkumar, Abhishek
Perin, Georges
Lapeyre, Julien
Bernard, Rozenn
Terrien, Kelig
Dudoux, Bertrand
Haboucha, Adil
Ollivier, Hélène
Dumeige, Yannick
Trebaol, Stéphane
author_facet Sureshkumar, Abhishek
Perin, Georges
Lapeyre, Julien
Bernard, Rozenn
Terrien, Kelig
Dudoux, Bertrand
Haboucha, Adil
Ollivier, Hélène
Dumeige, Yannick
Trebaol, Stéphane
contents Whispering-gallery-mode (WGM) microsphere resonators have emerged as a versatile platform across various photonic applications. Despite significant progress, their performance at short wavelengths is fundamentally limited by scattering-induced optical losses that restrict achievable quality factors (Q-factor). Although surface roughness has long been recognised as the leading cause of these losses, its physical origin has remained unclear, with current understanding attributing it to unavoidable fabrication imperfections. Here, we show that thermally excited capillary waves are the fundamental source of scattering losses in microsphere cavities. Using high-resolution atomic force microscopy (AFM) combined with rigorous statistical analysis, we quantitatively identify the characteristic signatures of frozen capillary fluctuations at the sub-nanometre level. The experimentally extracted roughness parameters show close agreement with theoretical predictions based on capillary wave theory. These findings fundamentally revise the prevailing interpretation of surface scattering losses and establish thermodynamic fluctuations, rather than fabrication defects, as the limiting roughness mechanism. By identifying frozen capillary waves as the limiting factor, this work opens new pathways for engineering ultra-high-Q microsphere resonators through fabrication management strategies, particularly for visible- and ultraviolet-photonic applications where scattering losses are most severe.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_08255
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Experimental Evidence of Thermal Capillary Waves Excitation on a Microsphere Surface
Sureshkumar, Abhishek
Perin, Georges
Lapeyre, Julien
Bernard, Rozenn
Terrien, Kelig
Dudoux, Bertrand
Haboucha, Adil
Ollivier, Hélène
Dumeige, Yannick
Trebaol, Stéphane
Optics
Materials Science
Whispering-gallery-mode (WGM) microsphere resonators have emerged as a versatile platform across various photonic applications. Despite significant progress, their performance at short wavelengths is fundamentally limited by scattering-induced optical losses that restrict achievable quality factors (Q-factor). Although surface roughness has long been recognised as the leading cause of these losses, its physical origin has remained unclear, with current understanding attributing it to unavoidable fabrication imperfections. Here, we show that thermally excited capillary waves are the fundamental source of scattering losses in microsphere cavities. Using high-resolution atomic force microscopy (AFM) combined with rigorous statistical analysis, we quantitatively identify the characteristic signatures of frozen capillary fluctuations at the sub-nanometre level. The experimentally extracted roughness parameters show close agreement with theoretical predictions based on capillary wave theory. These findings fundamentally revise the prevailing interpretation of surface scattering losses and establish thermodynamic fluctuations, rather than fabrication defects, as the limiting roughness mechanism. By identifying frozen capillary waves as the limiting factor, this work opens new pathways for engineering ultra-high-Q microsphere resonators through fabrication management strategies, particularly for visible- and ultraviolet-photonic applications where scattering losses are most severe.
title Experimental Evidence of Thermal Capillary Waves Excitation on a Microsphere Surface
topic Optics
Materials Science
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.08255