resonatorami
Resonatorami is a term that appears in some technical discussions to designate systems composed of multiple resonators that interact to form a composite resonant response. In this usage, a resonatorami is an arrangement or network of resonant elements—mechanical, electrical, optical, or acoustic—designed to shape the spectral content of a signal by coupling energy among elements. Key features include a set of natural frequencies, a coupling topology, and a high overall quality factor achieved through cooperative resonances rather than a single high-Q unit.
Mechanisms: Coupling enables energy exchange between elements, allowing modes to hybridize and produce multiple resonant features.
Types: Mechanical arrays such as mass–spring lattices; electrical networks of inductors and capacitors or resonant circuits;
Applications: In signal processing, resonatorami can form filters with tailored passbands; in sensing, shifts of collective
History and usage: The term is not widely standardized. In peer‑reviewed literature, similar structures are usually
See also: resonator, coupled resonator, metamaterial, photonic crystal, filter.