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  2. %This is the LaTeX ARTICLE template for RSC journals
  3. %Copyright The Royal Society of Chemistry 2014
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  96. %%%TITLE, AUTHORS AND ABSTRACT%%%
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  102. \includegraphics{head_foot/DOI} & \noindent\LARGE{\textbf{ Plasma-induced breaking symmetry by ultrafast laser irradiation of $\pmb{Si}$ nanoparticle }} \\%Article title goes here instead of the text "This is the title"
  103. \vspace{0.3cm} & \vspace{0.3cm} \\
  104. & \noindent\large{Anton Rudenko,$^{\ast}$\textit{$^{a}$} Tatiana Itina,\textit{$^{b\ddag}$} Konstantin Ladutenko,\textit{$^{a}$} and Sergey Makarov\textit{$^{a}$}} \\%Author names go here instead of "Full name", etc.
  105. \includegraphics{head_foot/dates} & \noindent\normalsize{The abstract should be a single paragraph which summarises the content of the article. Any references in the abstract should be written out in full \textit{e.g.} [Surname \textit{et al., Journal Title}, 2000, \textbf{35}, 3523].} \\%The abstract goes here instead of the text "The abstract should be..."
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  113. \section*{}
  114. \vspace{-1cm}
  115. %%%FOOTNOTES%%%
  116. \footnotetext{\textit{$^{a}$~Address, Address, Town, Country. Fax: XX XXXX XXXX; Tel: XX XXXX XXXX; E-mail: xxxx@aaa.bbb.ccc}}
  117. \footnotetext{\textit{$^{b}$~Address, Address, Town, Country. }}
  118. %Please use \dag to cite the ESI in the main text of the article.
  119. %If you article does not have ESI please remove the the \dag symbol from the title and the footnotetext below.
  120. \footnotetext{\dag~Electronic Supplementary Information (ESI) available: [details of any supplementary information available should be included here]. See DOI: 10.1039/b000000x/}
  121. %additional addresses can be cited as above using the lower-case letters, c, d, e... If all authors are from the same address, no letter is required
  122. \footnotetext{\ddag~Additional footnotes to the title and authors can be included \emph{e.g.}\ `Present address:' or `These authors contributed equally to this work' as above using the symbols: \ddag, \textsection, and \P. Please place the appropriate symbol next to the author's name and include a \texttt{\textbackslash footnotetext} entry in the the correct place in the list.}
  123. %%%END OF FOOTNOTES%%%
  124. %%%MAIN TEXT%%%%
  125. I would say that switching of scattering properties was conceptually studied in our recent works.
  126. 1) A single nanoparticle for tuning of front-to-back ratio: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b02534 ; http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acsphotonics.6b00358
  127. 2) A dimer for beam steering: https://arxiv.org/abs/1606.05199 (accepted in Las.Phot.Rev.)
  128. All these studies were carried out analytically assuming homogenized dielectric permittivity.
  129. Next step is to show numerically how EHP is distributed in a nanoparticle with temporal evolution. The most interesting result is the plasma-induced breaking symmetry which potentially might be useful for beam steering or enhanced second harmonics generation. I believe, there is enough novelty to publish such results at least in ACS Photonics. For instance, we can show temporal EHP evolution at different intensities, NP diameters and durations. Finally, we can introduce some parameter of the nanoparticle asymmetry (ratio of EHP density in front and back sides of NP), which can be represented as a 2D map.
  130. I suggest such plan:
  131. \begin{itemize}
  132. \item Fig.1: Beautiful conceptual picture
  133. \item Fig.2: Temporal evolution of EHP in NP with different diameters at fixed intensity, in order to show that we have the highest asymmetry around magnetic dipole (MD) resonance. This would be really nice!
  134. \item Fig.3: Temporal evolution of EHP in NP with fixed diameter (at MD) at different intensities, in order to show possible regimes of plasma-patterning of NP volume.
  135. \item Fig.4: Dependence on pulse duration is also interesting. We have to show at which durations the asymmetry factor is saturated.
  136. \item Fig.5: 2D map of asymmetry factor in false colors, where x-axis and y-axis correspond to intensity and NP diameter.
  137. \end{itemize}
  138. Additionally, if you will manage to calculate evolution of scattering power pattern and show considerable effect of beam steering, we can try Nanoscale or LPR, because the novelty will be very high.
  139. I have discuss this concept with a number of my colleagues, including Yuri Kivshar. Honestly, all of them said that such work could be interesting, because no one studied EHP distribution inside a Si nanoparticle.
  140. The main text of the article\cite{Mena2000} should appear here.
  141. \subsection{This is the subsection heading style}
  142. Section headings can be typeset with and without numbers.\cite{Abernethy2003}
  143. \subsubsection{This is the subsubsection style.~~} These headings should end in a full point.
  144. \paragraph{This is the next level heading.~~} For this level please use \texttt{\textbackslash paragraph}. These headings should also end in a full point.
  145. \section{Graphics and tables}
  146. \subsection{Graphics}
  147. Graphics should be inserted on the page where they are first mentioned (unless they are equations, which appear in the flow of the text).\cite{Cotton1999}
  148. \begin{figure}[h]
  149. \centering
  150. \includegraphics[height=0.7\linewidth]{Si-flow-R140-XYZ-Eabs}
  151. \caption{An example figure caption}
  152. \label{fgr:example}
  153. \end{figure}
  154. \begin{figure*}
  155. \centering
  156. \includegraphics[height=3cm]{example2}
  157. \caption{An image from the \textit{Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics} cover gallery, set as a two-column figure.}
  158. \label{fgr:example2col}
  159. \end{figure*}
  160. \subsection{Tables}
  161. Tables typeset in RSC house style do not include vertical lines. Table footnote symbols are lower-case italic letters and are typeset at the bottom of the table. Table captions do not end in a full point.\cite{Arduengo1992,Eisenstein2005}
  162. \begin{table}[h]
  163. \small
  164. \caption{\ An example of a caption to accompany a table}
  165. \label{tbl:example}
  166. \begin{tabular*}{0.5\textwidth}{@{\extracolsep{\fill}}lll}
  167. \hline
  168. Header one/units & Header two & Header three \\
  169. \hline
  170. 1 & 2 & 3 \\
  171. 4 & 5 & 6 \\
  172. 7 & 8 & 9 \\
  173. 10 & 11 & 12 \\
  174. \hline
  175. \end{tabular*}
  176. \end{table}
  177. Adding notes to tables can be complicated. Perhaps the easiest method is to generate these manually.\footnote[4]{Footnotes should appear here. These might include comments relevant to but not central to the matter under discussion, limited experimental and spectral data, and crystallographic data.}
  178. % an example of a two-column table
  179. %\begin{table*}
  180. %\small
  181. %\caption{\ An example of a caption to accompany a table, table captions do not end in a full point}
  182. %\label{tbl:example}
  183. %\begin{tabular*}{\textwidth}{@{\extracolsep{\fill}}lllllll}
  184. %\hline
  185. %Header one & Header two & Header three & Header four & Header five & Header six & Header seven\\
  186. %\hline
  187. %1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & 5 & 6 & 7\\
  188. %8 & 9 & 10 & 11 & 12 & 13 & 14 \\
  189. %15 & 16 & 17 & 18 & 19 & 20 & 21\\
  190. %\hline
  191. %\end{tabular*}
  192. %\end{table*}
  193. \section{Equations}
  194. Equations can be typeset inline \textit{e.g.} $ y = mx + c$ or displayed with and without numbers:
  195. \[ A = \pi r^2 \]
  196. \begin{equation}
  197. \frac{\mathrm{\gamma}}{\mathrm{\epsilon}x} r^2 = 2r
  198. \end{equation}
  199. \pagebreak
  200. \begin{widetext}
  201. \begin{eqnarray} \label{e27}
  202. T_{nn''}^{mm''}=
  203. \begin{cases}
  204. & \dfrac{(q{+}p'')!\,(p{-}p'')!}{(q{-}q'')!\,(p{+}q'')!}\,a^{m-m''}b^{n''}\,P_{p-p''}^{(m-m'',n'')}(1{-}2A^2)P_{p-p''}^{(m-m'',n'')}(2B^2{-}1)~~~ \\ & \text{when}~~~n-n''\geq m-m''\geq0~,\\
  205. \\
  206. & \dfrac{(p{+}q'')!\,(q{-}q'')!}{(p{-}p'')!\,(q{+}p'')!}\,a^{m''-m}b^{n''}\,P_{q-q''}^{(m''-m,n'')}(1{-}2A^2)\,P_{q-q''}^{(m''-m,n'')}(2B^2{-}1)~~~ \\ & \text{when}~~~ n-n''\geq m''-m\geq0~, \\
  207. \\
  208. &0 ~~~ \text{otherwise}.
  209. \end{cases}
  210. \end{eqnarray}
  211. \end{widetext}
  212. You can also put lists into the text. You can have bulleted or numbered lists of almost any kind.
  213. The \texttt{mhchem} package can also be used so that formulae are easy to input: \texttt{\textbackslash ce\{H2SO4\}} gives \ce{H2SO4}.
  214. For footnotes in the main text of the article please number the footnotes to avoid duplicate symbols. e.g. \texttt{\textbackslash footnote[num]\{your text\}} the corresponding author $\ast$ counts as footnote 1, ESI as footnote 2, e.g. if there is no ESI, please start at [num]=[2], if ESI is cited in the title please start at [num]=[3] etc. Please also cite the ESI within the main body of the text using \dag.
  215. \section{Conclusions}
  216. The conclusions section should come at the end of article. For the reference section, the style file rsc.bst can be used to generate the correct reference style.
  217. %%%END OF MAIN TEXT%%%
  218. %The \balance command can be used to balance the columns on the final page if desired. It should be placed anywhere within the first column of the last page.
  219. %\balance
  220. %If notes are included in your references you can change the title from 'References' to 'Notes and references' using the following command:
  221. %\renewcommand\refname{Notes and references}
  222. %%%REFERENCES%%%
  223. \bibliography{rsc} %You need to replace "rsc" on this line with the name of your .bib file
  224. \bibliographystyle{rsc} %the RSC's .bst file
  225. \end{document}