Parity–time symmetry and variable optical isolation in active–passive-coupled microresonators

On-chip parity–time-symmetric optics is experimentally demonstrated at a wavelength of 1,550 nm in two directly coupled, high- Q silica microtoroid resonators with balanced effective gain and loss. Switchable optical isolation with a nonreciprocal isolation ratio between −8 dB and +8 dB is also show...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature photonics 2014-07, Vol.8 (7), p.524-529
Hauptverfasser: Chang, Long, Jiang, Xiaoshun, Hua, Shiyue, Yang, Chao, Wen, Jianming, Jiang, Liang, Li, Guanyu, Wang, Guanzhong, Xiao, Min
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:On-chip parity–time-symmetric optics is experimentally demonstrated at a wavelength of 1,550 nm in two directly coupled, high- Q silica microtoroid resonators with balanced effective gain and loss. Switchable optical isolation with a nonreciprocal isolation ratio between −8 dB and +8 dB is also shown. The findings will be useful for potential applications in optical isolators, on-chip light control and optical communications. Compound-photonic structures with gain and loss 1 provide a powerful platform for testing various theoretical proposals on non-Hermitian parity–time-symmetric quantum mechanics 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 and initiate new possibilities for shaping optical beams and pulses beyond conservative structures. Such structures can be designed as optical analogues of complex parity–time-symmetric potentials with real spectra. However, the beam dynamics can exhibit unique features distinct from conservative systems due to non-trivial wave interference and phase-transition effects. Here, we experimentally realize parity–time-symmetric optics on a chip at the 1,550 nm wavelength in two directly coupled high- Q silica-microtoroid resonators with balanced effective gain and loss. With this composite system, we further implement switchable optical isolation with a non-reciprocal isolation ratio from −8 dB to +8 dB, by breaking time-reversal symmetry with gain-saturated nonlinearity in a large parameter-tunable space. Of importance, our scheme opens a door towards synthesizing novel microscale photonic structures for potential applications in optical isolators, on-chip light control and optical communications.
ISSN:1749-4885
1749-4893
DOI:10.1038/nphoton.2014.133