• Journal of Semiconductors
  • Vol. 40, Issue 2, 020402 (2019)
Jian Wang and Shuang Zheng
Author Affiliations
  • Wuhan National Laboratory for Optoelectronics, School of Optical and Electronic Information, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan 430074, China
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    DOI: 10.1088/1674-4926/40/2/020402 Cite this Article
    Jian Wang, Shuang Zheng. Quantum-optical analogies of dimer structures[J]. Journal of Semiconductors, 2019, 40(2): 020402 Copy Citation Text show less
    (Color online) Microwave-dressed photonic module. (a) The photonic molecule is realized by a pair of identical coupled optical microring resonators (resonant frequency ω1 = ω2). The system has two distinct energy levels—a symmetric and an antisymmetric optical mode. (b, c) When the applied microwave frequency is tuned to match the mode separation, dissipative coupling leads the two photonic levels to split into four levels. This effect is analogous to Autler–Townes splitting. (d) False-coloured scanning electron microscope image of the coupled microring resonators. (e) On-demand storage and retrieval of light using a photonic dark mode. Figure adapted from Ref. [10].
    Fig. 1. (Color online) Microwave-dressed photonic module. (a) The photonic molecule is realized by a pair of identical coupled optical microring resonators (resonant frequency ω1  = ω2). The system has two distinct energy levels—a symmetric and an antisymmetric optical mode. (b, c) When the applied microwave frequency is tuned to match the mode separation, dissipative coupling leads the two photonic levels to split into four levels. This effect is analogous to Autler–Townes splitting. (d) False-coloured scanning electron microscope image of the coupled microring resonators. (e) On-demand storage and retrieval of light using a photonic dark mode. Figure adapted from Ref. [10].
    Jian Wang, Shuang Zheng. Quantum-optical analogies of dimer structures[J]. Journal of Semiconductors, 2019, 40(2): 020402
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