Anomalous transport regime in non-Hermitian, Anderson-localizing hybrid systems
Himadri Sahoo, R Vijay, Sushil Mujumdar

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates experimentally that hybrid particles in a non-Hermitian disordered system can exhibit an unexpected increase in transmission under strong disorder, revealing a novel anomalous transport regime.
Contribution
It reports the first experimental observation of anomalous transport in non-Hermitian, Anderson-localizing systems with hybrid states, showing enhanced transmission due to non-orthogonal resonance hopping.
Findings
Observation of Anderson localization of hybrid states.
Emergence of enhanced transmission at strong disorder.
Evidence of a new anomalous transport regime.
Abstract
In a disordered environment, the probability of transmission of a wave reduces with increasing disorder, the ultimate limit of which is the near-zero transmission due to Anderson localization. Under localizing conditions, transport is arrested because the wave is trapped in the bulk of the sample with decaying-exponential coupling to the boundaries. Any further increase in disorder does not modify the overall transport properties. Here, we report the experimental demonstration of a hitherto-unrealized anomalous transport of hybrid particles under localizing disorder in a non-Hermitian setting. We create hybrid polariton-photon states in a one-dimensional copper sample with a comb-shaped periodic microstructure designed for microwave frequencies. Metallic dissipation realizes the necessary non-Hermiticity. Disorder is introduced by deliberate alterations of the periodic microstructure.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum and electron transport phenomena · Plasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research · Quantum Mechanics and Non-Hermitian Physics
