Yogesh N. Joglekar, Andrew K. Harter, "Passive parity-time-symmetry-breaking transitions without exceptional points in dissipative photonic systems [Invited]," Photonics Res. 6, A51 (2018)

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- Photonics Research
- Vol. 6, Issue 8, A51 (2018)

Fig. 1. Imaginary parts of the spectrum Eq. (1 ) for nonzero perturbations δ / J = { 0.01 , 0.1 } . The schematic PT dimer with gain (red) and loss (blue) sites is shown. When γ / J ≪ 1 , I λ ± grow linearly with the gain-loss strength, but are nonzero. The divergence of their derivative at the threshold γ = J is smoothed out as δ > 0 increases. In this case, the system is always in the PT-broken phase, no matter how small I λ ± ( γ ) ≠ 0 are.

Fig. 2. Decay rates Γ ± of the two eigenmodes of Eq. (5 ) show the emergence of a slowly decaying mode for γ ∼ J , not only at δ = 0 , the prototypical exceptional point case, but also for a wide range of δ / J ≠ 0 . Inset: the PT transition threshold is determined by d Γ / d γ changing its sign from positive to negative. These results are even in the offset δ and thus remain the same for δ < 0 .
![Net transmission T(γ) shows an upturn with increasing loss strength γ signaling the passive PT transition [29]. It shows minimal change from its δ=0 value [29] when δ/J is increased all the way to unity, i.e., the system is removed far from the exceptional point. These results are even in δ and thus remain unchanged for δ<0. Inset: the lattice-model results (line) are consistent with the BPM results (stars) obtained with sample parameters in Ref. [29]; see Section 5 for details.](/Images/icon/loading.gif)
Fig. 3. Net transmission T ( γ ) shows an upturn with increasing loss strength γ signaling the passive PT transition [29]. It shows minimal change from its δ = 0 value [29] when δ / J is increased all the way to unity, i.e., the system is removed far from the exceptional point. These results are even in δ and thus remain unchanged for δ < 0 . Inset: the lattice-model results (line) are consistent with the BPM results (stars) obtained with sample parameters in Ref. [29]; see Section 5 for details.

Fig. 4. PT transition in three coupled waveguides with lossy center waveguide, Eq. (6 ). The decay rates Γ k show the emergence of a slow mode near γ PT ∼ 2 2 J for a wide range of center-site potential. These results are even in δ and thus remain valid for δ < 0 .

Fig. 5. PT transition in three coupled waveguides with first lossy waveguide, Eq. (7 ). When δ = 0 , the two modes with equal decay rates undergo a sign change for d Γ k / d γ near γ / J ∼ 1.4 . When onsite potential δ > 0 is introduced, the two degenerate modes split, and the eigenmode decay-rate diagram hints at the existence of an exceptional point at δ / J = 0.75 .

Fig. 6. BPM results for the intensity I ( x , z ) of a symmetric initial pulse in a waveguide trimer defined by Hamiltonian Eq. (6 ) with (a), (b) δ = 0 and (c), (d) δ / J = 1 . (a) When γ / J = 2.75 < γ PT , the pulse decays quickly. (b) At a much larger loss, γ / J = 10 , the pulse propagates longer, giving rise to increased transmission. (c) For γ / J = 2.75 , the pulse decays quickly. (d) At γ / J = 10 , the pulse propagates longer. In both cases, δ = 0 and δ / J = 1 , the emergence of a slowly decaying mode is clear; in the latter case, the Hamiltonian is far removed from an exceptional point.

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