Anomalous Transient Amplification of Waves in Non-normal Photonic Media
Abstract
Dissipation is a ubiquitous phenomenon in dynamical systems encountered in nature because no finite system is fully isolated from its environment. In optical systems, a key challenge facing any technological application has traditionally been the mitigation of optical losses. Recent work has shown that a new class of optical materials that consist of a precisely balanced distribution of loss and gain can be exploited to engineer novel functionalities for propagating and filtering electromagnetic radiation. Here we show a generic property of optical systems that feature an unbalanced distribution of loss and gain, described by non-normal operators, namely, that an overall lossy optical system can transiently amplify certain input signals by several orders of magnitude. We present a mathematical framework to analyze the dynamics of wave propagation in media with an arbitrary distribution of loss and gain, and we construct the initial conditions to engineer such non-normal power amplifiers. Our results point to a new design space for engineered optical systems employed in photonics and quantum optics.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review X
- Pub Date:
- October 2014
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1410.4626
- Bibcode:
- 2014PhRvX...4d1044M
- Keywords:
-
- 03.65.Ge;
- 11.30.Er;
- 42.25.Bs;
- 42.82.Et;
- Solutions of wave equations: bound states;
- Charge conjugation parity time reversal and other discrete symmetries;
- Wave propagation transmission and absorption;
- Waveguides couplers and arrays;
- Physics - Optics
- E-Print:
- 11 pages, 11 figures