Nanoscale effects in photonic structures fabricated from pure optical fibres
are reviewed. In contrast to those in plasmonics, these structures do not
contain metal particles, wires, or films with nanoscale dimensions.
Nevertheless, a nanoscale perturbation of the fibre radius can significantly
alter their performance. I consider slow propagation of whispering gallery
modes along the fibre surface. The axial propagation of these modes is so
slow that they can be governed by extremely small nanoscale changes of the
optical fibre radius. The described phenomenon is exploited in SNAP (Surface
Nanoscale Axial Photonics), a new platform for fabrication of miniature
super-low-loss photonic integrated circuits with unprecedented sub-angstrom
precision. The SNAP theory and applications are reviewed.