Anapole

In physics, an anapole (from Greek ἀνά (ana) 'above' and πόλος (polos) 'pole') is a system of currents that does not radiate into the far field.

The term "anapole" first appeared in the work of Zel'dovich, in which he thanks A. S. Kompaneets, who first proposed the name.

In photonics, anapoles first appeared in 2015[2] as zeros in the Mie-coefficient of a particular multipole in the scattering spectrum.

Total scattering cross-section is not zero in the anapole state, due to the contribution of other multipoles.

[3][4] The terms "anapole" and toroidal moment were once used synonymously,[5][6] but this ended.

Mie scattering by a dielectric nanoparticle with refractive index n=4.5. Normalized scattering cross-section spectrum in linear and log scale. Zeros, which refer to anapole states, are marked.