Light-induced translation symmetry breaking via nonlinear phononics
Adri\'an G\'omez Pueyo, Alaska Subedi

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates theoretically that intense mid-infrared light pulses can induce translation symmetry breaking in crystals like KTaO$_3$ by nonlinear phonon interactions, despite the usual wavelength limitations.
Contribution
The study reveals a mechanism for breaking translation symmetry using nonlinear phononics driven by intense light, supported by first principles calculations and coupled phonon equations.
Findings
Softening of the transverse acoustic mode at X point under increased $Q_{HX}$
Identification of a threshold pump amplitude of 465 MV/cm for symmetry breaking
Potential to control material symmetry with ultrafast light pulses
Abstract
Light has a wavelength that is usually longer than the size of the unit cell of crystals. Hence, even intense light pulses are not expected to break the translation symmetry of materials. However, certain materials, including KTaO, exhibit peaks in their Raman spectra corresponding to their Brillouin zone boundary phonons due to second-order Raman processes, which provide a mechanism to drive these phonons using intense midinfrared lasers. We investigated the possibility of breaking the translation symmetry of KTaO by driving its highest-frequency transverse optic mode at the point. Our first principles calculations show that the energy curve of the transverse acoustic mode at softens and develops a double-well shape as the value of the coordinate is increased, while that of the other transverse…
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
TopicsPhotorefractive and Nonlinear Optics · Nonlinear Photonic Systems · Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies
