Optomagnonics in dispersive media: magnon-photon coupling enhancement at the epsilon-near-zero frequency

ORAL

Abstract

Reaching strong light-matter coupling in solid-state systems has been long pursued for the implementation of scalable quantum devices. Here, we put forward the concept of a platform capable of achieving strong coupling between magnetic excitations (magnons) and optics based in an epsilon-near-zero medium, that's it, a medium in which the permittivity is close to zero. We adopt a phenomenological approach to quantize the electromagnetic field inside a dispersive magnetic medium and obtain a Hamiltonian describing the interaction between photons and magnons and the frequency-dependent coupling. We predict that, in the epsilon-near-zero regime, the single-magnon photon optomagnonic coupling can be comparable to the uniform magnon's frequency for small magnetic volumes. For state-of-the-art illustrative values, this would correspond to achieving the single-magnon strong coupling regime, where the coupling rate is larger than all the decay rates. Finally, we show that the non-linear energy spectrum intrinsic to this coupling regime regime can be probed via the characteristic multiple magnon sidebands in the photon power spectrum.

*V.A.S.V. Bittencourt and S. Viola Kusminskiy acknowledge financial support from the Max Planck Society. I.L. acknowledges support from ERC Starting Grant 948504, Ram\'{o}n y Cajal fellowship RYC2018-024123-I and project RTI2018-093714-301J-I00 sponsored by MCIU/AEI/FEDER/UE.

Publication: V. A. S. V. Bittencourt, I. Liberal and S. Viola-Kusminskiy, arXiv 2110.02984[cond-mat.mes-hall] (2021)

Presenters

  • Victor Bittencourt

    • Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light
    • Max Planck Institute for Science of Light

Authors

  • Victor Bittencourt

    • Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light
    • Max Planck Institute for Science of Light
  • Iñigo Liberal

    • Universidad Pública de Navarra
  • Silvia Viola Kusminskiy

    • Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light