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Coherent Perfect Absorption in Chaotic Optical Microresonators for Efficient Modal Control

Published 16 Nov 2022 in physics.optics | (2211.08727v1)

Abstract: Non-Hermitian wave engineering has attracted a surge of interest in photonics in recent years. One of the prominent phenomena is coherent perfect absorption (CPA), in which the annihilation of electromagnetic scattering occurs by destructive interference of multiple incident waves. This concept has been implemented in various platforms to demonstrate real-time control of absorption, scattering and radiation by varying the relative phase of the excitation signals. However, so far these studies have been limited to simple photonic systems involving single or few modes at well-defined resonant frequencies. Realizing CPA in more complex photonic systems is challenging because it typically requires engineering the interplay of a large number of resonances featuring large spatial complexity within a narrow frequency range. Here, we extend the paradigm of coherent control of light to a complex photonic system involving more than 1,000 optical modes in a chaotic microresonator. We efficiently model the optical fields within a quasi-normal mode (QNM) expansion, and experimentally demonstrate chaotic CPA states, as well as their non-Hermitian degeneracies, which we leverage to efficiently control the cavity excitation through the input phases of multiple excitation channels. Our results shed light on the universality of non-Hermitian physics beyond simple resonant systems, paving the way for new opportunities in the science and technology of complex nanophotonic systems by chaotic wave interference.

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