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Related Concept Videos

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Fabrication and Testing of Microfluidic Optomechanical Oscillators
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Tunable topological charge vortex microlaser.

Zhifeng Zhang1, Xingdu Qiao1, Bikashkali Midya2

  • 1Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.

Science (New York, N.Y.)
|May 16, 2020
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Researchers developed a tunable vortex microlaser using non-Hermitian symmetry breaking. This chiral light source offers variable orbital angular momentum (OAM) for high-capacity optical communication and data multiplexing.

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Area of Science:

  • Optics and Photonics
  • Quantum Information Science
  • Materials Science

Background:

  • Orbital angular momentum (OAM) in light beams enables high-capacity data multiplexing.
  • Dynamically tunable OAM light sources are crucial for OAM modulation and multiplexing technologies.
  • Existing methods for OAM generation often lack dynamic tunability or scalability.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To demonstrate a dynamically tunable OAM light source.
  • To explore the use of non-Hermitian symmetry breaking for controlling chiral light emission.
  • To provide a pathway for next-generation optical communication technologies.

Main Methods:

  • Harnessing total momentum conservation principles.
  • Utilizing spin-orbit interaction in optical systems.
  • Implementing non-Hermitian symmetry breaking in a microlaser design.
  • Operating at room temperature for practical applications.

Main Results:

  • Demonstration of an OAM-tunable vortex microlaser.
  • Generation of chiral light states with variable topological charges.
  • Successful operation at a standard telecommunication wavelength.
  • Proof of concept for scalable, simultaneous multivortex emissions.

Conclusions:

  • The developed microlaser offers a flexible and tunable source of OAM light.
  • This approach provides a novel route for advanced optical communication systems.
  • The findings pave the way for multidimensional OAM-spin-wavelength division multiplexing.