Gauge-invariant theory of truncated quantum light-matter interactions in arbitrary media
Chris Gustin, Sebastian Franke, Stephen Hughes

TL;DR
This paper develops a gauge-invariant framework for modeling truncated quantum light-matter interactions in arbitrary media, enabling accurate descriptions of ultrastrong coupling in complex photonic environments.
Contribution
It introduces a method to preserve gauge invariance during mode truncation in macroscopic QED, applicable to structured media with absorption and dispersion, and clarifies gauge issues in lossy systems.
Findings
Provides a gauge-fixed quantization scheme respecting gauge invariance.
Derives models for ultrastrong light-matter interactions in structured media.
Shows how to compute observables unambiguously in mode-truncated systems.
Abstract
The loss of gauge invariance in models of light-matter interaction which arises from material and photonic space truncation can pose significant challenges to conventional quantum optical models when matter and light strongly hybridize. In structured photonic environments, necessary in practice to achieve strong light-matter coupling, a rigorous model of field quantization within the medium is also needed. Here, we use the framework of macroscopic QED by quantizing the fields in an arbitrary material system, with a spatially-dependent dispersive and absorptive dielectric, starting from a fundamental light-matter action. We truncate the material and mode degrees of freedom while respecting the gauge principle by imposing a partial gauge fixing constraint during canonical quantization, which admits a large number of gauges including the Coulomb and multipolar gauges. We also consider…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic and Optical Devices · Strong Light-Matter Interactions · Quantum Information and Cryptography
