Microwave-to-optical transduction using magnon-exciton coupling in a layered antiferromagnet
Pratap Chandra Adak, Iris McDaniel, Suvodeep Paul, Caleb Heuvel-Horwitz, Bikash Das, Vitali Kozlov, Kseniia Mosina, Arun Ramanathan, Xavier Roy, Zden\v{e}k Sofer, Tian Zhong, Akashdeep Kamra, Arno Thielens, Andrea Al\`u, and Vinod M. Menon

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a broadband, coherent microwave-to-optical transducer using magnon-exciton coupling in layered antiferromagnetic CrSBr, offering a scalable platform for quantum networks.
Contribution
It introduces a novel transduction scheme exploiting strong light-matter interactions at exciton resonances in layered magnets, achieving broadband conversion without cavity enhancement.
Findings
Coherent microwave-to-optical conversion over ~300 MHz bandwidth.
Multiple exciton-polariton resonances inherit magnon response.
Potential for scalability and integration in quantum networks.
Abstract
Coherent interfaces between microwave-frequency quantum systems and low-loss optical links are essential for quantum networks. However, existing microwave-optical transducers often trade conversion efficiency against added noise, bandwidth, and device integrability. Here, we demonstrate coherent microwave-to-optical transduction based on magnon-exciton coupling in the layered antiferromagnet CrSBr. Driving the antiferromagnetic resonance with microwave signals imprints coherent modulation on a reflected optical probe, generating optical sidebands that are resonantly enhanced near excitonic transitions. While prior magnon-based approaches to microwave-to-optical transduction have typically relied on intrinsically weak off-resonant magneto-optical effects (e.g., Faraday rotation), our scheme exploits strong light-matter interactions at exciton resonances. Even in a bulk crystal without…
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