Speaker
Description
A giant atom is a quantum emitter that can be coupled to the field non-locally at a set of coupling points [1]. Such a new generation of emitters can nowadays be implemented in circuit QED setups, where some spectacular effects - unachievable with normal atoms - have already been observed. One of these is the possibility to enable chiral (i.e. fully uni-directional) emission upon proper engineering of coupling-point complex phases [2,3], which can have important applications for quantum communication. Here, for the first time, we investigate the emission properties of a giant atom coupled to a 2D honeycomb photonic lattice. This allows combining the intrinsically anisotropic light emission across lattices [4] with the topology of coupling points and their phase-difference pattern. Such phases can be used to control the distribution of emitted light among a set of different directions.
References:
[1] A. F. Kockum, arXiv:1912.13012
[2] T. Ramos et al., PRA 93, 062104 (2016)
[3] H. Joshi, F. Yang, M. Mirhosseini, PRX 13, 021039 (2023)
[4] A. G. Tudela & I. Cirac, PRA 96, 043811 (2017)
Abstract category | Quantum Optics |
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