scholarly journals Cascaded PT-Symmetric Artificial Sheets: Multimodal Manipulation of Self-Dual Emitter-Absorber Singularities, and Unidirectional and Bidirectional Reflectionless Transparencies

Author(s):  
Minye Yang ◽  
Zhilu Ye ◽  
Mohamed Farhat ◽  
Pai-Yen Chen

Abstract We herein introduce cascaded parity-time (PT)-symmetric artificial sheets (e.g., metasurfaces or frequency selective surfaces) that may exhibit multiple higher-order laser-absorber modes and bidirectional reflectionless transmission resonances within the PT-broken phase, as well as a unidirectional reflectionless transmission resonance associated with the exceptional point (EP). We derive the explicit expressions of the gain-loss parameter required for obtaining these modes and their intriguing physical properties. By exploiting the cascaded PT structures, the gain-loss threshold for the self-dual laser-absorber operation can be remarkably lowered, while the EP remains unaltered. We further study interferometric sensing based on such a multimodal laser-absorber and demonstrate that its sensitivity could be unprecedentedly high and proportional to the number of metasurfaces along the light propagation direction.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Senghor TAGOUEGNI ◽  
Fernande FOTSA-NGAFFO ◽  
Aurélien KENFACK-JIOTSA

Abstract We study a non-Hermitian electronic dimers system based on an imaginary resistor (Z) in a (N+2) level atomic multi-pod configuration. Non-Hermitian systems depend on a gain/loss parameter and are specifically marked by a degeneracy exhibited at an exceptional point (EP) separating different phases of complex modes dynamics. Interestingly, the structural characterization and the dispersive properties reveal a broad range of strong coupling where the interplay between the control and the probe field induce a simultaneous EIT, EIA and ATS. Here, by identifying the underlying physical mechanisms, we show that multiple windows of transparency can be strongly enhanced by the incorporation of several dimers in the multipod network. On the other hand, if the pumping field is resonant in the weak regime, multiple EIT and EIA windows result in the number of dimers. Remarkably, the proposed system embedded a multiple coupling mechanism whose modulation induces a couplingless point whereby the energy cross. At this point EIT and related phenomena vanish.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 525 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlo Edoardo Campanella ◽  
Martino De Carlo ◽  
Antonello Cuccovillo ◽  
Vittorio M. N. Passaro

2007 ◽  
Vol 2007 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arvind Battula ◽  
Yalin Lu ◽  
R. J. Knize ◽  
Kitt Reinhardt ◽  
Shaochen Chen

Transmission metallic gratings having the shape of converging-diverging channel (CDC) give an extra degree of freedom to exhibit enhanced transmission resonances. By varying the gap size at the throat of CDC, the spectral locations of the transmission resonance bands can be shifted close to each other and have high transmittance in a very narrow energy band. Hence, the CDC shape metallic gratings can lead to almost perfect transmittance for any desired wavelength by carefully optimizing the metallic material, gap at the throat of CDC, and grating parameters. In addition, a cavity surrounded by the CDC shaped metallic grating and a one-dimensional (1D) photonic crystal (PhC) can lead to an enhanced emission with properties similar to a laser. The large coherence length of the emission is achieved by exploiting the coherence properties of the surface waves on the gratings and PhC. The new multilayer structure can attain the spectral and directional control of emission with onlyp-polarization. The resonance condition inside the cavity is extremely sensitive to the wavelength, which would then lead to high emission in a very narrow wavelength band. Such simple 1D multilayer structure should be easy to fabricate and have applications in photonic circuits, thermophotovoltaics, and potentially in energy efficient incandescent sources.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arpan Roy ◽  
Sibnath Dey ◽  
Arnab Laha ◽  
Abhijit Biswas ◽  
Somnath Ghosh

2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (15) ◽  
pp. 1850184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuel Kengne ◽  
Ahmed Lakhssassi

To analytically investigate the matter-wave solitons of Bose–Einstein condensates (BECs) in time-dependent complex potential, we consider a cubic-quintic Gross–Pitaevskii (GP) equation with distributed coefficients and a dissipative term. By introducing a suitable ansatz, we establish the criterion of the modulational instability (MI) of the system and present an explicit expression for the growth rate of a purely growing MI. Effects of the parabolic background potential, as well as of the linear potential, the gain/loss parameter, and the two- and three-body interatomic interactions on the MI are investigated. We show how the feeding/loss parameter can be well used to control the instability of the system. The analytical resolution of the considered GP equation leads to exact bright, dark and kink solitary wave solutions which are used to investigate analytically the dynamics of matter-wave solitons in BECs under consideration. These analytical investigations show that the amplitude and the motion of bright, dark and kink solitary waves depend on the strengths of the two- and three-body interatomic interactions, as well as on the strengths of the external trapping potential and the parameter of the gain/loss of atoms in the condensate.


Nanophotonics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 343-360
Author(s):  
A. Douglas Stone ◽  
William R. Sweeney ◽  
Chia Wei Hsu ◽  
Kabish Wisal ◽  
Zeyu Wang

AbstractWe outline and interpret a recently developed theory of impedance matching or reflectionless excitation of arbitrary finite photonic structures in any dimension. The theory includes both the case of guided wave and free-space excitation. It describes the necessary and sufficient conditions for perfectly reflectionless excitation to be possible and specifies how many physical parameters must be tuned to achieve this. In the absence of geometric symmetries, such as parity and time-reversal, the product of parity and time-reversal, or rotational symmetry, the tuning of at least one structural parameter will be necessary to achieve reflectionless excitation. The theory employs a recently identified set of complex frequency solutions of the Maxwell equations as a starting point, which are defined by having zero reflection into a chosen set of input channels, and which are referred to as R-zeros. Tuning is generically necessary in order to move an R-zero to the real frequency axis, where it becomes a physical steady-state impedance-matched solution, which we refer to as a reflectionless scattering mode (RSM). In addition, except in single-channel systems, the RSM corresponds to a particular input wavefront, and any other wavefront will generally not be reflectionless. It is useful to consider the theory as representing a generalization of the concept of critical coupling of a resonator, but it holds in arbitrary dimension, for arbitrary number of channels, and even when resonances are not spectrally isolated. In a structure with parity and time-reversal symmetry (a real dielectric function) or with parity–time symmetry, generically a subset of the R-zeros has real frequencies, and reflectionless states exist at discrete frequencies without tuning. However, they do not exist within every spectral range, as they do in the special case of the Fabry–Pérot or two-mirror resonator, due to a spontaneous symmetry-breaking phenomenon when two RSMs meet. Such symmetry-breaking transitions correspond to a new kind of exceptional point, only recently identified, at which the shape of the reflection and transmission resonance lineshape is flattened. Numerical examples of RSMs are given for one-dimensional multimirror cavities, a two-dimensional multiwaveguide junction, and a multimode waveguide functioning as a perfect mode converter. Two solution methods to find R-zeros and RSMs are discussed. The first one is a straightforward generalization of the complex scaling or perfectly matched layer method and is applicable in a number of important cases; the second one involves a mode-specific boundary matching method that has only recently been demonstrated and can be applied to all geometries for which the theory is valid, including free space and multimode waveguide problems of the type solved here.


Nanophotonics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 1855-1861 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nanxi Li ◽  
Yuan Hsing Fu ◽  
Yuan Dong ◽  
Ting Hu ◽  
Zhengji Xu ◽  
...  

AbstractMetasurface-based beam deflector, as an important optical element to bend the light propagation direction, has drawn a lot of interests in research to achieve miniaturization of devices and reduction of system complexity. Based on the 12-inch immersion lithography technology, in this work, an ultra-thin and large-area pixelated metasurface beam deflector with a footprint of 2500 × 2500 μm, formed by nanopillars with diameters from 221 to 396 nm, is demonstrated on a 12-inch glass wafer. The 21 × 21 array of deflectors is designed to bend the input light in different directions and to generate 441 random points. In addition, the layer transfer on the 12-inch glass wafer makes the device working in transmission mode at a 940-nm wavelength. The random point array generated from the experiment shows good match with the design. This pixelated metasurface beam deflector can generate random points simultaneously and has potential to make beam steering by switching each pixel of the beam deflector, which can be applied on motion detection, facial recognition, and light detection and ranging.


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