Abstract
Anisotropic mirrors are used to form a laser resonator exhibiting non-Hermitian, parity-time (PT) symmetric, polarization states. The relative angle of the two mirrors principal axes is used to control the degree of non-hermiticity. A sharp symmetry-breaking transition is observed at a specific angle, called the exceptional point, where the two states coalesce into a single polarization state and the interference pattern produced by counter-propagating (CP) waves vanishes. At a smaller angle, in the unbroken PT symmetry regime, the polarization state experiencing higher losses is suppressed. In the broken symmetry regime, the two polarization states coexist, but the orthogonality of the CP waves favors single longitudinal mode emission by suppressing the interference pattern of the standing wave. The two regimes meet at the exceptional point, where a unique polarization state exists in a resonator free from interference intensity pattern. Microchip PT-symmetric lasers operating at the exceptional point are thus an attractive solution to achieve single mode operation from a miniature monolithic device without any intra-cavity element.
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