Abstract
Photonic simulators are increasingly used to study physical systems for their affluent manipulable degrees of freedom. The advent of photonic chips offers a promising path towards compact and configurable simulators. Thin-film lithium niobate chips are particularly well suited for this purpose due to the high electro-optic coefficient, which allows for the creation of lattices in the frequency domain. Here, we fabricate and periodically modulate an on-chip resonator to observe band structures. The employed modulation rates are lower than the resonator linewidth, resulting in the inclusion of multiple lattice points within one resonant peak. This alleviates the difficulty of applying and detecting multiharmonic signals which are conventionally of ultrahigh frequency on chips and enables us to simulate structures with arbitrary-range coupling. As examples, we showcase the simulation of nanotubes along several directions where the required frequencies are reduced by more than 3 orders of magnitude (up to reduce near 100GHz to around 10MHz in our examples). Encompassing various models equipped with a gauge potential, our experiments demonstrate an effective and technically feasible scenario which may bolster the development of on-chip photonic simulators complementing existing techniques.
Published Version
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