PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Revolutionizing optical control with topological edge states

Researchers harness the robustness of topological edge states to manipulate light transport and revolutionize optical control in nanophotonics

Revolutionizing optical control with topological edge states
2023-06-06
(Press-News.org) Nanophotonics and topology have gained significant interest due to the unique properties they offer. One area of focus is the investigation of topological edge states (TESs). These states have captured widespread attention because they are very resistant to errors and imperfections. Arising from topologically nontrivial phases, TESs provide a powerful toolkit for the architectural design of photonic integrated circuits. TES transport has led to the discovery of various intriguing optical effects and applications, including directional couplers, one-way waveguides, mode-locked waveguides, and pseudospin propagation in ring resonator arrays.

Scientists have recently expanded their efforts to manipulate TESs by exploring techniques such as adiabatic modulation, nonlinear effects, and complex braiding. Optical systems have demonstrated a range of intriguing phenomena, such as edge-to-edge topological transport and tunable localization of topological states. These phenomena hold immense potential for the development of cutting-edge technologies and applications, including energy and information routing, nonlinear photonics, and quantum computing.

While current methods focus on manipulating TESs, they have not yet paid much attention to enhancing the interaction between TESs.  By improving the coupling between TESs, researchers can enable the exchange of light energy between different parts of a topological lattice, which can help control the transport of TESs in a more flexible way.

A group of researchers from the Wuhan National Laboratory for Optoelectronics (WNLO) and the School of Optical and Electronic Information (OEI) at Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST) in China recently made a significant breakthrough. As reported in Advanced Photonics, they developed an innovative approach to efficiently manipulate TES transport for an optical channel switcher on a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) chip. Their study focused on edge-to-edge channel conversion in a four-level waveguide lattice using the Landau-Zener (LZ) model. By exploiting the finite-size effect in a two-unit-cell optical lattice, they established an alternative, effective, and dynamic method to modulate and control the transport of topological modes.

The waveguide lattice they used is similar to a 2D material called a Chern insulator, which is known to have TESs. As the number of unit cells decreases, the TESs evolve according to the LZ model. By applying the LZ single-band evolution principle, the researchers were able to dynamically control the TESs and achieve almost perfect channel conversion.

Topological LZ nanophotonic devices have the potential to be used in various other applications. They can be used as switches that work at specific wavelengths of light. By incorporating LZ dynamics into different systems, it may be possible to create chiral channel conversions. This concept can also be expanded to more complex waveguide lattices, allowing for even more advanced devices.

The researchers found that these topological LZ optical devices are quite robust, meaning they can work well even when certain parameters are changed. This opens opportunities to develop practical devices such as optical switches for routing networks on computer chips or devices that can combine or separate multiple signals in a waveguide.

Read the Gold Open Access article by B.-C. Xu, B.-Y Xie, L.-H. Xu, et al., “Topological Landau–Zener nanophotonic circuits,” Adv. Photon. 5(3), 036005 (2023), doi 10.1117/1.AP.5.3.036005.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Revolutionizing optical control with topological edge states

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Research to develop new rare disease therapies underway at The Jackson Laboratory

Research to develop new rare disease therapies underway at The Jackson Laboratory
2023-06-06
Researchers led by Cathleen Lutz, Ph.D., are using an exciting new method, preclinical genomic editing, to develop safe, effective therapies for rare diseases and bring them to the clinic. Unfortunately, the translation of the accumulated knowledge to safe and effective therapies has lagged. There are many reasons to predict that the situation is changing for the better, however, as powerful new gene-based therapies succeed in clinical trials and receive FDA approval. Therapeutic strategies such as gene replacement and gene modulation (e.g., blocking protein production with anti-sense oligonucleotides) are at the forefront of the recent progress. ...

Elizabeth Anderson and Alondra Nelson win 2023 Sage-CASBS Award

2023-06-06
Sage and the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University are pleased to announce Elizabeth Anderson and Alondra Nelson as winners of the 2023 Sage-CASBS Award. Established in 2013, the Sage-CASBS Award recognizes outstanding achievement in the behavioral and social sciences that advances our understanding of pressing social issues. It underscores the role of the social and behavioral sciences in enriching and enhancing public discourse and good governance. Past winners of the award include Daniel Kahneman, psychologist and Nobel laureate in economic sciences; Pedro ...

Study: Doing good for others is good for children’s and teens’ mental, physical health

2023-06-06
Children and teenagers who volunteer tend to flourish mentally and physically, according to a new study from UTHealth Houston. The study, led by Kevin Lanza, PhD, assistant professor of epidemiology, human genetics, and environmental sciences at UTHealth Houston School of Public Health, was published recently in JAMA Network Open. Overall, the research team found that youths who had volunteered in the past year were in better physical health, had a more positive outlook on life, and were less likely to have anxiety, depression, or behavioral problems compared to their peers who did not volunteer. “These study results bring optimism that youth volunteering could be ...

Health equity is the focus of LBGTQ+ Pride Month celebrations across the country

2023-06-06
DALLAS, June 6, 2023 — According to a study recently published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, lesbian and bisexual women in France had poorer heart health than heterosexual women, a finding that could be attributed to discrimination and other stressors faced by the LGBTQ+ community. In support of Pride Month, the American Heart Association, a global force for longer, healthier lives for all, is promoting awareness and health education for all people across the spectrum of diversity, including those who identify as LGBTQ+. For more than 50 years, the LGBTQ+ community has spent the month of June ...

Order in chaos: Atmosphere’s Antarctic oscillation has natural cycle

Order in chaos: Atmosphere’s Antarctic oscillation has natural cycle
2023-06-06
HOUSTON – (June 6, 2023) – Climate scientists at Rice University have discovered an “internally generated periodicity” — a natural cycle that repeats every 150 days — in the north-south oscillation of atmospheric pressure patterns that drive the movement of the Southern Hemisphere’s prevailing westerly winds and the Antarctic jet stream. “This is something that arises from the internal dynamics of the atmosphere,” said Pedram Hassanzadeh, co-author of a study about the discovery in the open-access journal AGU Advances. “We were playing with some new equations that we had derived ...

Recent papers in ACS Measurement Science Au

2023-06-06
ACS Measurement Science Au is a member of the ACS Au family of journals. These publications are open access, and each one focuses on a specific field relevant to chemistry. Here, we take a look at a few recent papers from ACS Measurement Science Au, which publishes experimental, computational or theoretical research in all areas of chemical measurement science. The journal welcomes papers on any phase of analytical operations, such as sampling, measurement and data analysis. “Colorimetric Signal Readout for the Detection of Volatile Organic Compounds Using a Printable Glass-Based ...

Two brain mechanisms for picking speech out of a crowd

Two brain mechanisms for picking speech out of a crowd
2023-06-06
Researchers led by Dr. Nima Mesgarani at Columbia University, US, report that the brain treats speech in a crowded room differently depending on how easy it is to hear, and whether we are focusing on it. Publishing June 6th in the open access journal PLOS Biology, the study uses a combination of neural recordings and computer modeling to show that when we follow speech that is being drowned out by louder voices, phonetic information is encoded differently than in the opposite situation. The findings could help improve hearing aids that work by isolating attended speech. Focusing on speech in a crowded room can be difficult, especially ...

Does multimorbidity impact chronic disease treatment?

Does multimorbidity impact chronic disease treatment?
2023-06-06
Treatment efficacy for a broad range of chronic diseases does not differ depending on patients’ comorbidities, according to a new study publishing June 6th in the open access journal PLOS Medicine by David McAllister of the University of Glasgow, UK, and colleagues. There is often uncertainty about how treatments for single conditions should be applied to people who have multiple chronic conditions (multimorbidity). This confusion stems, in part, from the fact that people with multimorbidity are under-represented in randomized controlled trials, and trials rarely report whether the efficacy of treatment ...

Finding clues about the process of cell plasticity

2023-06-06
Researchers have long thought that once a cell starts down its path of differentiation, growing into a skin cell or a liver cell or a neuron, that path could not be changed.   But over the past two decades, scientists have realized this pathway is more complex. Now, using zebrafish as a model, a University of Michigan research team has discovered that a loop in the body's mitochondria—organelles within cells that produce energy for the body—may allow cells to retreat up the path of differentiation. Their results are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.   "Cell fate and differentiation ...

Tectonics matter: USU geoscientists probe geochemistry, microbial diversity of Peruvian hot springs

Tectonics matter: USU geoscientists probe geochemistry, microbial diversity of Peruvian hot springs
2023-06-06
LOGAN, UTAH, USA -- South America’s Andes Mountains, the world’s longest mountain range and home to some of the planet’s highest peaks, feature thousands of hot springs. Driven by plate tectonics and fueled by hot rock and fluids, these thermal discharges vary widely in geochemistry and microbial diversity. Utah State University geoscientists, along with colleagues from Montana State University, examined 14 hot springs within the southern Andes in Peru and discovered microbial community composition is distinctly different in two tectonic settings. Dennis Newell, associate professor in USU’s Department of Geosciences, and recent USU graduate Heather Upin, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

American Academy of Pediatrics promotes shared reading starting in infancy as a positive parenting practice with lifelong benefits

Unexpected human behaviour revealed in prisoner's dilemma study: Choosing cooperation even after defection

Distant relatedness in biobanks harnessed to identify undiagnosed genetic disease

UCLA at ASTRO: Predicting response to chemoradiotherapy in rectal cancer, 2-year outcomes of MRI-guided radiotherapy for prostate cancer, impact of symptom self-reporting during chemoradiation and mor

Estimated long-term benefits of finerenone in heart failure

MD Anderson launches first-ever academic journal: Advances in Cancer Education & Quality Improvement

Penn Medicine at the 2024 ASTRO Annual Meeting

Head and neck, meningioma research highlights of University of Cincinnati ASTRO abstracts

Center for BrainHealth receives $2 million match gift from Adm. William McRaven (ret.), recipient of Courage & Civility Award

Circadian disruption, gut microbiome changes linked to colorectal cancer progression

Grant helps UT develop support tool for extreme weather events

Autonomous vehicles can be imperfect — As long as they’re resilient

Asteroid Ceres is a former ocean world that slowly formed into a giant, murky icy orb

McMaster researchers discover what hinders DNA repair in patients with Huntington’s Disease

Estrogens play a hidden role in cancers, inhibiting a key immune cell

A new birthplace for asteroid Ryugu

How are pronouns processed in the memory-region of our brain?

Researchers synthesize high-energy-density cubic gauche nitrogen at atmospheric pressure

Ancient sunken seafloor reveals earth’s deep secrets

Automatic speech recognition learned to understand people with Parkinson’s disease — by listening to them

Addressing global water security challenges: New study reveals investment opportunities and readiness levels

Commonly used drug could transform treatment of rare muscle disorder

Michael Frumovitz, M.D., posthumously honored with Julie and Ben Rogers Award for Excellence

NIH grant supports research to discover better treatments for heart failure

Clinical cancer research in the US is increasingly dominated by pharmaceutical industry sponsors, study finds

Discovery of 3,775-year-old preserved log supports ‘wood vaulting’ as a climate solution

Preterm births are on the rise, with ongoing racial and economic gaps

Menopausal hormone therapy use among postmenopausal women

Breaking the chain of intergenerational violence

Unraveling the role of macrophages in regulating inflammatory lipids during acute kidney injury

[Press-News.org] Revolutionizing optical control with topological edge states
Researchers harness the robustness of topological edge states to manipulate light transport and revolutionize optical control in nanophotonics