Metasurface lasers programmed by optical pump patterns
Nelson de Gaay Fortman, Radoslaw Kolkowski, Nick Feldman, Peter Schall, A. Femius Koenderink

TL;DR
This paper presents a reconfigurable metasurface laser platform where the emission properties are dynamically programmed through optical pump patterns, enabling control over lasing modes, symmetry breaking, and phase synchronization.
Contribution
It introduces a novel programmable metasurface laser system that allows dynamic control of emission geometry and mode behavior using structured optical pumping.
Findings
Demonstrated lasing at high-symmetry points of the Brillouin zone.
Observed spontaneous symmetry breaking in K-point lasing.
Achieved phase synchronization of spatially separated lasers.
Abstract
Metasurface lasers offer unprecedented control over light emission, yet their spatial and modal characteristics are typically fixed post-fabrication. Here, we introduce a reconfigurable plasmonic metasurface laser platform in which the lasing area geometry, and thus the emission properties, are dynamically programmed via spatially structured optical pumping. Using hexagonal arrays of silver nanoparticles embedded in dye-doped waveguides, we demonstrate lasing at high-symmetry points of the Brillouin zone, including the K and M points. K-point lasing exhibits spontaneous symmetry breaking (SSB) in relative intensity between degenerate K and K' modes, with no bias induced by pump geometry, even for geometries that explicitly break symmetry. In contrast, M-point lasing allows deterministic control over emission channels via asymmetric pumping. We further show that spatially separated…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMetamaterials and Metasurfaces Applications · Plasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research · Acoustic Wave Phenomena Research
