Accessibility Tools

Skip to main content

"Emerging Quantum Pheneomena in Nonlinear Nanophotonics: Toward New Regimes of Light-Matter Interactions”

TYPESolid State Institute Seminar
Speaker:Dr. Eran Lustig
Affiliation:Stanford University U.S.A.
Date:15.01.2025
Time:12:30 - 13:30
Location:Solid State Auditorium(Entrance)
Remark:Jointly with the Faculty of Electrical & Computer Engineering
Abstract:

Abstract

Nanophotonics is at the forefront of research and development in scalable quantum technologies, ranging from quantum sensing to quantum computing. Traditionally, inherently weak photon-photon and photon-atom interactions in dielectric materials pose significant challenges to fully exploiting the potential of these platforms. However, recent advances in the fabrication of nonlinear microresonators with nanometric features have allowed for the enhancement of all-optical interactions, necessitating new approaches to generating, controlling, and measuring quantum light.

In this seminar, I will delve into unexplored regimes at the intersection of nonlinear and quantum optics. I will begin by showcasing our latest advancements in developing integrated microresonators in thin-film 4H-Silicon Carbide. This innovation enables nonlinear photonics, quantum optics, and collective quantum emitter excitations on the same platform. Following this, I will present our experimental demonstration of quadrature lattices of the quantum vacuum. This work shows how pulses that spontaneously emerge in microresonators can generate lattice dynamics of the quantum vacuum and how we can exert control over these dynamics.

I will then discuss the broader implications of our findings, including enhanced interactions with quantum emitters, and ultrafast nonlinear quantum nanophotonics, which enable nonlinear interactions at the single photon level. These outcomes pave the way toward new regimes of lightmatter interactions that are enabled on scalable photonic microchips, with transformative implications for fundamental physics and quantum applications.

BIO

Dr. Eran Lustig earned his PhD in Physics from the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. He is currently a Postdoctoral Scholar at the Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University, USA. Dr. Lustig's research focuses on nonlinear and quantum optics in photonic microchips and integrated photonic platforms. Additionally, he explores concepts such as topological photonics and time-varying media, and their relation to novel phenomena in optics.


https://technion.zoom.us/j/97523923109

Meeting ID 975 2392 3109