resonoida
Resonoida is a theoretical construct used in physics and speculative literature to describe a class of collective, resonant excitations in networks of coupled oscillators or metamaterials. The term combines resono-, from Latin resono "to resound", with -ida, a suffix used for illustrative quasi-particles. In the common framework, resonoida are localized vibrational modes that persist due to energy exchange among neighboring resonators, enabling sustained oscillations at characteristic frequencies even in the presence of modest damping. They arise in systems where the resonators have similar natural frequencies and are linked by tunable couplings, such as mechanical metamaterials, acoustic lattices, or optical resonator arrays.
Formation and dynamics: The dynamics are described by coupled-mode theories or tight-binding-like Hamiltonians. Energy is exchanged
Experimental status: As a formal designation, resonoida has limited direct experimental demonstration; it is sometimes discussed
Applications and outlook: If realizable, resonoida could enable robust energy transfer, frequency filtering, or tunable signal
See also: resonance, metamaterial, coupled oscillators, localized modes, quasi-particles.