Driven-dissipative phases and dynamics in non-Markovian nonlinear photonics
Jamison Sloan, Nicholas Rivera, Marin Solja\v{c}i\'c

TL;DR
This paper explores non-Markovian driven-dissipative nonlinear photonic systems, revealing their potential for low-threshold nonlinear effects, high-rate instabilities, and enhanced quantum state generation, surpassing traditional Markovian limits.
Contribution
It introduces a novel class of non-Markovian driven-dissipative cavities and demonstrates their advantages in classical and quantum regimes, including low-threshold nonlinearities and high-order Fock state generation.
Findings
Low nonlinear thresholds in non-Markovian cavities
Self-pulsing instabilities at THz rates
Generation of strongly squeezed states exceeding 15 dB below classical limit
Abstract
Interactions between photons (nonlinearities) enable a powerful form of control over the state of light. This control has enabled technologies such as light sources at new wavelengths, ultra-short optical pulses, frequency-comb metrology systems, even quantum light sources. Common to a wide variety of nonlinear optical technologies is an equilibrium between an energy source, such as an external laser, and dissipation, such as radiation loss or absorption. In the vast majority of these systems, the coupling between the system and the outside world (which leads to loss) is well-described as ``Markovian,'' meaning that the outside world has no memory of its past state. In this work, we introduce a class of driven-dissipative systems in which a nonlinear cavity experiences non-Markovian coupling to the outside world. In the classical regime, we show that these non-Markovian cavities can…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic and Optical Devices · Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
