Emergence of unidirectionality and phase separation in optically dense emitter ensembles
Kasper J. Kusmierek, Max Schemmer, Sahand Mahmoodian, Klemens Hammerer

TL;DR
This paper investigates how unidirectionality and phase separation emerge in dense emitter ensembles in one-dimensional systems, revealing critical behaviors and the influence of spatial disorder on light transmission and phase transitions.
Contribution
It introduces a crossover framework between bidirectional and unidirectional models, analyzing phase diagrams and critical points using mean-field and cumulant expansion methods.
Findings
Phase separation occurs at a critical optical depth depending on spatial order.
Critical points correspond to maxima in inelastically transmitted photons.
Unidirectional models effectively describe a broad class of 1D emitter systems.
Abstract
The transmission of light through an ensemble of two-level emitters in a one-dimensional geometry is commonly described by one of two emblematic models of quantum electrodynamics (QED): the driven-dissipative Dicke model or the Maxwell-Bloch equations. Both exhibit distinct features of phase transitions and phase separations, depending on system parameters such as optical depth and external drive strength. Here, we explore the crossover between these models via a parent spin model from bidirectional waveguide QED, by varying positional disorder among emitters. Solving mean-field equations and employing a second-order cumulant expansion for the unidirectional model -- equivalent to the Maxwell-Bloch equations -- we study phase diagrams, the emitter's inversion, and transmission depending on optical depth, drive strength, and spatial disorder. We find in the thermodynamic limit the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Nonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation · Photonic and Optical Devices
