Localization effects from local phase shifts in the modulation of waveguide arrays
Konrad Tschernig, Armando Perez-Leija, Kurt Busch

TL;DR
This paper explores how local random phase shifts in waveguide array modulations can induce Anderson localization and enable precise engineering of light propagation, including dynamic localization and defect-free surface states.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method of incorporating randomness into artificial gauge fields via phase shifts, demonstrating control over effective coupling and wave localization in photonic lattices.
Findings
Random phase shifts can induce Anderson localization in 1D and 2D waveguide lattices.
Engineered phase modulations enable dynamic localization and defect-free surface states.
The approach allows coupling coefficient control without altering lattice footprint.
Abstract
Artificial gauge fields enable the intriguing possibility to manipulate the propagation of light as if it were under the influence of a magnetic field even though photons possess no intrinsic electric charge. Typically, such fields are engineered via periodic modulations of photonic lattices such that the effective coupling coefficients after one period become complex-valued. In this work, we investigate the possibility to introduce randomness into artificial gauge fields by applying local random phase shifts in the modulation of lattices of optical waveguides. We first study the elemental unit consisting of two coupled single-mode waveguides and determine the effective complex-valued coupling coefficient after one period of the modulation as a function of the phase shift, the modulation amplitude and the modulation frequency. Thereby we identify the regime where varying the modulation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptical and Acousto-Optic Technologies · Random lasers and scattering media · Photonic and Optical Devices
