Flying couplers above spinning resonators generate irreversible refraction
Shai Maayani,
Raphael Dahan,
Yuri Kligerman,
Eduard Moses,
Absar U. Hassan,
Hui Jing,
Franco Nori,
Demetrios N. Christodoulides and
Tal Carmon ()
Additional contact information
Shai Maayani: Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Technion
Raphael Dahan: Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Technion
Yuri Kligerman: Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Technion
Eduard Moses: Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Technion
Absar U. Hassan: CREOL/College of Optics and Photonics, University of Central Florida
Hui Jing: Hunan Normal University
Franco Nori: University of Michigan
Demetrios N. Christodoulides: CREOL/College of Optics and Photonics, University of Central Florida
Tal Carmon: Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Technion
Nature, 2018, vol. 558, issue 7711, 569-572
Abstract:
Abstract Creating optical components that allow light to propagate in only one direction—that is, that allow non-reciprocal propagation or ‘isolation’ of light—is important for a range of applications. Non-reciprocal propagation of sound can be achieved simply by using mechanical components that spin1,2. Spinning also affects de Broglie waves 3 , so a similar idea could be applied in optics. However, the extreme rotation rates that would be required, owing to light travelling much faster than sound, lead to unwanted wobbling. This wobbling makes it difficult to maintain the separation between the spinning devices and the couplers to within tolerance ranges of several nanometres, which is essential for critical coupling4,5. Consequently, previous applications of optical6–17 and optomechanical10,17–20 isolation have used alternative methods. In hard-drive technology, the magnetic read heads of a hard-disk drive fly aerodynamically above the rapidly rotating disk with nanometre precision, separated by a thin film of air with near-zero drag that acts as a lubrication layer 21 . Inspired by this, here we report the fabrication of photonic couplers (tapered fibres that couple light into the resonators) that similarly fly above spherical resonators with a separation of only a few nanometres. The resonators spin fast enough to split their counter-circulating optical modes, making the fibre coupler transparent from one side while simultaneously opaque from the other—that is, generating irreversible transmission. Our setup provides 99.6 per cent isolation of light in standard telecommunication fibres, of the type used for fibre-based quantum interconnects 22 . Unlike flat geometries, such as between a magnetic head and spinning disk, the saddle-like, convex geometry of the fibre and sphere in our setup makes it relatively easy to bring the two closer together, which could enable surface-science studies at nanometre-scale separations.
Date: 2018
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0245-5
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