Unbalanced gain and loss in a quantum photonic system
C. A. Downing, O. I. R. Fox

TL;DR
This paper explores quantum photonic systems with unbalanced gain and loss, identifying exceptional and critical points that influence spectral features and entanglement, advancing understanding beyond classical non-Hermitian models.
Contribution
It introduces a quantum model with unbalanced gain and loss, revealing quantum-specific exceptional and critical points affecting system behavior.
Findings
Identification of quantum exceptional points affecting spectral features
Discovery of points causing sudden quantum entanglement loss
Characterization of quantum responses beyond non-Hermitian Hamiltonians
Abstract
Theories in physics can provide a kind of map of the physical system under investigation, showing all of the possible types of behavior which may occur. Certain points on the map are of greater significance than others, because they describe how the system responds in a useful or interesting manner. For example, the point of resonance is of particular importance when timing the pushes onto a person sat on a swing. More sophisticatedly, so-called exceptional points have been shown to be significant in optical systems harbouring both gain and loss, as typically described by non-Hermitian Hamiltonians. However, expressly quantum points of interest -- be they exceptional points or otherwise -- arising in quantum photonic systems have been far less studied. Here we consider a paradigmatic model: a pair of coupled qubits subjected to an unbalanced ratio of gain and loss. We mark on its map…
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