Abstract

We consider the role of degeneracy in Parity-Time (PT) symmetry breaking for non-hermitian wave equations beyond one dimension. We show that if the spectrum is degenerate in the absence of T-breaking, and T is broken in a generic manner (without preserving other discrete symmetries), then the standard PT-symmetry breaking transition does not occur, meaning that the spectrum is complex even for infinitesimal strength of gain and loss. However the realness of the entire spectrum can be preserved over a finite interval if additional discrete symmetries X are imposed when T is broken, if X decouple all degenerate modes. When this is true only for a subset of the degenerate spectrum, there can be a partial PT transition in which this subset remains real over a finite interval of T-breaking. If the spectrum has odd-degeneracy, a fraction of the degenerate spectrum can remain in the symmetric phase even without imposing additional discrete symmetries, and they are analogous to dark states in atomic physics. These results are illustrated by the example of different T-breaking perturbations of a uniform dielectric disk and sphere, and a group theoretical analysis is given in the disk case. Finally, we show that multimode coupling is capable of restoring the T-symmetric phase at finite T-breaking. We also analyze these questions when the parity operator is replaced by another spatial symmetry operator and find that the behavior can be qualitatively different.

Highlights

  • Parity-time (PT )-symmetric systems have attracted considerable interest in the past few years

  • For the case of open, scattering systems, the transition is seen in the eigenvalues of the scattering matrix, which can remain on the unit circle despite the nonHermiticity up to some threshold and depart from it in pairs with inverse moduli [4,5,6]

  • If T is not generically broken, i.e., if some further discrete spatial symmetries are preserved, it is possible that either the entire spectrum remains real over a finite interval or a finite subset of the degenerate spectrum does

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Summary

Douglas Stone

If the spectrum has odd degeneracy, a fraction of the degenerate spectrum can remain in the symmetric phase even without imposing additional discrete symmetries, and they are analogous to dark states in atomic physics. These results are illustrated by the example of different T -breaking perturbations of a uniform dielectric disk and sphere, and a group-theoretical analysis is given in the disk case. We show that multimode coupling is capable of restoring the PT -symmetric phase at finite T breaking We analyze these questions when the parity operator is replaced by another spatial symmetry operator and find that the behavior can be qualitatively different

INTRODUCTION
ROLE OF DEGENERACY: A QUALITATIVE ARGUMENT
QUANTITATIVE STUDY OF 2D DISK
Protected PT -symmetric phase due to additional discrete symmetries
General symmetry analysis
MULTIMODE COUPLING
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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