Exceptional points in lossy media enable decay-free wave propagation
Alexander Yulaev, Sangsik Kim, Qing Li, Daron A. Westly, Brian J., Roxworthy, Kartik Srinivasan, and Vladimir A. Aksyuk

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates experimentally that exceptional points in lossy media can enable decay-free wave propagation with uniform energy loss, challenging traditional decay expectations in such media and opening new applications.
Contribution
It introduces the first theoretical and experimental evidence of decay-free wave propagation in purely lossy media using exceptional point physics.
Findings
Decay-free wave propagation observed in nanostructured waveguides
Uniform energy loss measured across waveguide length
Supports potential for dispersion-engineered materials with exceptional points
Abstract
Waves entering a spatially uniform lossy medium typically undergo exponential decay, arising from either the energy loss of the Beer-Lambert-Bouguer transmission law or the evanescent penetration during reflection. Recently, exceptional point singularities in non-Hermitian systems have been linked to unconventional wave propagation, such as the predicted extremely spatially broad constant-intensity guided modes. Despite such promises, the possibility of decay-free wave propagation in a purely lossy medium has been neither theoretically suggested nor experimentally realized until now. Here we discover and experimentally demonstrate decay-free wave propagation accompanied by a striking uniformly distributed energy loss across arbitrary thicknesses of a homogeneous periodically nanostructured waveguiding medium with exceptional points. Predicted by coupled-mode theory and supported by…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Fiber Laser Technologies · Photonic and Optical Devices · Quantum Mechanics and Non-Hermitian Physics
