Parity-dependent unidirectional and chiral photon transfer in reversed-dissipation cavity optomechanics
Zhen Chen, Qichun Liu, Jingwei Zhou, Peng Zhao, Haifeng Yu, and Tiefu Li, Yulong Liu

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates broadband, parity-dependent unidirectional and chiral photon transfer in a reversed-dissipation cavity optomechanics system, overcoming bandwidth limitations of mechanical resonators and enabling advanced nonreciprocal photonic devices.
Contribution
It introduces a reversed-dissipation regime in cavity optomechanics that achieves broadband nonreciprocal photon transmission and reveals parity-dependent chiral energy transfer mechanisms.
Findings
Bandwidth of nonreciprocal transmission exceeds mechanical linewidth
Parity of exceptional points controls transfer direction
High-order exceptional points enable parity-dependent circulators
Abstract
Nonreciprocal elements, such as isolators and circulators, play an important role in classical and quantum information processing. Recently, strong nonreciprocal effects have been experimentally demonstrated in cavity optomechanical systems. In these approaches, the bandwidth of the nonreciprocal photon transmission is limited by the mechanical resonator linewidth, which is arguably much smaller than the linewidths of the cavity modes in most electromechanical or optomechanical devices. In this work, we demonstrate broadband nonreciprocal photon transmission in the \emph{reversed-dissipation} regime, where the mechanical mode with a large decay rate can be adiabatically eliminated while mediating anti--symmetric dissipative coupling with two kinds of phase factors. Adjusting the relative phases allows the observation of \emph{periodic} Riemann-sheet structures with…
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