Nederlands

Using Topological Photon Chips to Uncover the Secrets of Open Systems

863
2024-02-02 18:08:02
Bekijk vertaling

Conservation of energy is a fundamental concept in physics that can be used to explain anything from planetary orbits to the internal workings of individual atoms.

Energy can be converted into other forms, but the overall energy level is usually considered to vary over time. Therefore, when attempting to describe a system, physicists usually pay attention to ensuring that it is isolated from the surrounding environment.

However, if the energy gain and loss are distributed in an orderly manner, so that they cancel each other out in all possible situations, the dynamics of the system can also be stable. This can be ensured through a phenomenon called parity check time symmetry.

All components of the system are carefully arranged to exchange the gain and loss of light through simultaneous mirroring and time reversal, making the system appear unchanged, just like a video played backwards and simultaneously reflected in a mirror, but looking exactly the same as the original video, which means it is PT symmetric.

PT symmetry is not just an academic concept; On the contrary, it opens the door to a more thorough understanding of open systems.

Professor Alexander Szameit from Rostock University specializes in studying interesting physical phenomena related to PT symmetry. Laser can replicate the behavior of artificial and natural materials arranged in periodic lattice structures in their customized photonic chips, making them an excellent platform for testing various physical theories.

Therefore, Professor Szameit and his colleagues successfully integrated the ideas of topology and PT symmetry. Topology is the study of properties that remain unchanged even when the underlying system is constantly deformed. When a system possesses these qualities, it becomes particularly resistant to external influences.

Szameit's team used laser engraved photonic waveguides in their experiments, which are optical structures etched into materials by laser beams.

In these "optical circuits," so-called topological insulators are implemented.
So far, people believe that open systems and this powerful boundary state are fundamentally incompatible. Researchers from Rostock, Vilzburg, and Indianapolis have jointly demonstrated that it is possible to address the apparent paradox by dynamically allocating benefits and losses over time.

These findings may pave the way for the development of new cutting-edge circuits for transmitting sound, light, and even electricity. These findings also represent significant advances in the understanding of topological insulators and open systems.

This study was funded by the German Research Foundation and supported by the Alfred Krupp von Boren and the Halbach Foundation.

Source: Laser Net


Gerelateerde aanbevelingen
  • Munich Shanghai Light Expo and Light Academic Publishing Center further strengthen cooperation

    In November 2024, based on the mutual trust and cooperation over the past years, the Munich Shanghai Optical Expo and the Light Academic Publishing Center of the Changchun Institute of Optics, Precision Mechanics and Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences (hereinafter referred to as the "Light Center") reached a consensus on further strategic development as they ushered in the year of disruptive sci...

    2024-12-05
    Bekijk vertaling
  • An efficient femtosecond pulse amplification technique for extracting the maximum stored energy in fiber laser amplifiers

    The well-known journal Optica published a paper in November 2024 titled "Near complete extraction of maximum stored energy from large core fibers using coherent pulse stacking amplification of femtosecond pulses"The authors of the paper were the University of Michigan, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Peking University, and the German Institute of Synchrotron Radiation.The specific technique...

    2024-11-13
    Bekijk vertaling
  • Mazak will showcase high-speed fiber lasers on Tube 2024

    Yamazaki Mazak designed the FT-150 fiber laser tube processing machine for high-speed cutting of small and medium-sized diameter pipes, for use in Tube 2024. The machine tool will be controlled by a new type of pipe cutting CNC, which will be exhibited for the first time in Europe.Tube 2024 will be held from April 15th to 19th in Dusseldorf, Germany. Mazak will be exhibited at booth C17 in Hall 5....

    2024-03-16
    Bekijk vertaling
  • A German research team has developed a new type of perovskite stacked battery

    According to relevant media reports, a research team from the Helmholtz Center in Berlin, Germany, and Humboldt University has jointly developed a new type of perovskite stacked battery. This battery has broken the world record for similar batteries with a photoelectric conversion efficiency of 24.6%. In the solar cell family, in addition to silicon-based solar cells, there are also thin-film so...

    02-08
    Bekijk vertaling
  • Germany has developed direct laser welding technology to achieve adhesive free connection from fiber to chip

    Recently, researchers and their partners from the Fraunhofer Institute for Reliability and Microstructure (IZM) in Germany announced the successful development of a laser welding technology that can efficiently fix optical fibers onto photonic integrated circuits (PICs) without the need for adhesive bonding.This technology is developed in response to biophoton sensing technology, mainly utilizing ...

    2023-08-22
    Bekijk vertaling