Topological Phase Control via Dynamic Complex Pole-Zero Engineering
Alex Krasnok

TL;DR
This paper presents a new method for achieving complete optical phase control at constant amplitude by dynamically engineering the pole-zero configuration of resonant photonic systems, enabling full 2π phase shifts without amplitude distortion.
Contribution
It introduces two novel approaches for topological phase control through complex pole-zero engineering, advancing the capabilities of optical modulators.
Findings
Achieved full 2π phase shift with constant amplitude in simulations.
Demonstrated topological phase control via complex frequency modulation.
Validated methods through theoretical analysis and numerical validation.
Abstract
Precise optical phase control is crucial for innovations in telecommunications, optical computing, quantum information processing, and advanced sensing. However, conventional phase modulators often introduce parasitic amplitude modulation and struggle to provide a full 2{\pi} phase shift efficiently. This work introduces a novel paradigm for complete and robust phase control at constant amplitude by dynamically engineering the pole-zero constellation of resonant photonic systems within the complex frequency plane. We theoretically elucidate and validate two distinct approaches: first, by modulating the complex frequency of an excitation signal to trace an iso-amplitude contour (apollonian circle) around a static reflection zero; and second, by dynamically tuning the physical parameters of the resonator such that its reflection zero encircles a fixed-frequency monochromatic excitation,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Non-Hermitian Physics · Topological Materials and Phenomena · Neural Networks and Reservoir Computing
