Observation of phase transitions in cavity magnon-polaritons

ORAL

Abstract

Hybridizing collective spin excitations in ferromagnetic crystals and a cavity with high cooperativity provides a new research subject in the field of cavity quantum electrodynamics. Owing to the damping of both photons and magnons, the polaritons have limited lifetimes. However, stationary magnon-polariton states can be reached by a dynamical balance between pumping and losses, so the intrinsical nonequilibrium system may be described by a non-Hermitian Hamiltonian. We designed a tunable cavity magnon-polaritons system which has non-Hermitian spectral degeneracies. By tuning the magnon-photon coupling strength, we observed an exceptional point and spontaneous symmetry-breaking in the cavity magnon-polariton system, where coherent perfect absorption is achieved in the unbroken-symmetry regime but not in the broken-symmetry regime. Meanwhile, the experimental results clearly display a phase transition of the system from the magnetically induced transparency regime to the weak-coupling regime.

*This work is supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (Grant No. 2016YFA0301200), the NSAF (Grant Nos. U1330201 and U1530401), the Most 973 Program of China (Grant No. 2014CB848700), and the Science Challenge Project (No. TZ2017003).

Presenters

  • Dengke Zhang

    • Beijing Computational Science Res Ctr
    • Quantum Physics and Quantum Information Division, Beijing Computational Science Research Center

Authors

  • Dengke Zhang

    • Beijing Computational Science Res Ctr
    • Quantum Physics and Quantum Information Division, Beijing Computational Science Research Center
  • Xiao-Qing Luo

    • Quantum Physics and Quantum Information Division, Beijing Computational Science Research Center
  • Yi-Pu Wang

    • Beijing Computational Science Res Ctr
    • Quantum Physics and Quantum Information Division, Beijing Computational Science Research Center
  • Tie-Fu Li

    • Institute of Microelectronics, Tsinghua University
  • Jianqiang You

    • Beijing Computational Science Res Ctr
    • Quantum Physics and Quantum Information Division, Beijing Computational Science Research Center