Emerging Quadrature Lattices of Kerr Combs
A quadrature lattice is a coupled array of squeezed vacuum field quadratures that offers new avenues in shaping the quantum properties of multimode light [1-3]. Such lattices are described within the framework of non-Hermitian, non-dissipative physics and exhibit intriguing lattice phenomena such as...
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Zusammenfassung: | A quadrature lattice is a coupled array of squeezed vacuum field quadratures
that offers new avenues in shaping the quantum properties of multimode light
[1-3]. Such lattices are described within the framework of non-Hermitian,
non-dissipative physics and exhibit intriguing lattice phenomena such as
lattice exceptional points, edge-states, entanglement and non-Hermitian skin
effect, offering fundamentally new methods for controlling quantum fluctuations
[1, 4]. Nonlinear resonators are suitable for studying multimode
pair-generation processes and squeezing which are non-dissipative in \chi(2)
and \chi(3) materials [5-12], but observing non-Hermitian lattice phenomena in
photonic quadrature lattices was not achieved. Remarkably, in dissipative Kerr
microcombs [13], which have revolutionized photonic technology, such lattices
emerge and govern the quantum noise that leads to comb formation. Thus, they
offer a unique opportunity to realize quadrature lattices, and to study and
manipulate multimode quantum noise which is essential for any quantum
technology. Here, we experimentally study non-Hermitian lattice effects in
photonic quadrature lattices for the first time. Our photonic quadrature
lattices emerge at Kerr microcomb transitions, allowing us to observe
fundamental connections between dispersion symmetry, frequency-dependent
squeezed supermodes, and non-Hermitian lattice physics in an integrated setup.
Our work unifies two major fields, quantum non-Hermitian physics and Kerr
combs, and opens the door to utilizing dissipative Kerr combs to experimentally
explore rich non-Hermitian physics in the quantum regime, engineer quantum
light, and develop new tools to study the quantum noise and formation of Kerr
combs. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2407.13049 |