Abstract

Non-Hermitian skin effect (NHSE) has led to interesting physics and sophisticated applications beyond the conventional framework. However, NHSE studies have been limited to an individual dimension due to the difficulty of constructing nonreciprocal coupling in higher-dimensional systems. With the concept of synthetic dimension, we realize two-dimensional (2D) NHSE in a synthetic photonic lattice. The synthetic photonic lattice is composed of a spatial dimension and a synthetic frequency dimension, which is constructed by introducing gain and loss and dynamically modulating the complex refractive index in a one-dimensional ring-resonator array. In the synthetic 2D NHSE system, we can manipulate the spatial position and frequency mode of the light in real time, thus enabling programmable light propagation and frequency conversion. Specifically, the incident light can be localized in the spatial dimension and the frequency dimension simultaneously, leading to second-order corner modes in the synthetic 2D NHSE lattice. Besides, the 2D NHSE system exhibits an excellent robustness for the disorder and point defect in the lattice. This work generalizes the non-Hermitian skin effect in synthetic dimension to control the light in different dimensions, which shows great promise for potential applications in on-chip light manipulation, frequency synthesis, and information processing.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call