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Non-Hermitian systems, with symmetric or antisymmetric Hamiltonians under the parity-time ($mathcal{PT}$) operations, can have entirely real eigenvalues. This fact has led to surprising discoveries such as loss-induced lasing and topological energy transfer. A merit of anti-$mathcal{PT}$ systems is free of gain, but in recent efforts on making anti-$mathcal{PT}$ devices, nonlinearity is still required. Here, counterintuitively, we show how to achieve anti-$mathcal{PT}$ symmetry and its spontaneous breaking in a linear device by spinning a lossy resonator. Compared with a Hermitian spinning device, significantly enhanced optical isolation and ultrasensitive nanoparticle sensing are achievable in the anti-$mathcal{PT}$-broken phase. In a broader view, our work provides a new tool to study anti-$mathcal{PT}$ physics, with such a wide range of applications as anti-$mathcal{PT}$ lasers, anti-$mathcal{PT}$ gyroscopes, and anti-$mathcal{PT}$ topological photonics or optomechanics.
We propose how to achieve synthetic $mathcal{PT}$ symmetry in optomechanics without using any active medium. We find that harnessing the Stokes process in such a system can lead to the emergence of exceptional point (EP), i.e., the coalescing of both
PT-symmetric scattering systems with balanced gain and loss can undergo a symmetry-breaking transition in which the eigenvalues of the non-unitary scattering matrix change their phase shifts from real to complex values. We relate the PT-symmetry brea
Over the past decade, parity-time ($mathcal{PT}$)-symmetric Hamiltonians have been experimentally realized in classical, optical settings with balanced gain and loss, or in quantum systems with localized loss. In both realizations, the $mathcal{PT}$-
We uncover that the breaking point of the PT-symmetry in optical waveguide arrays has a dramatic impact on light localization induced by the off-diagonal disorder. Specifically, when the gain/loss control parameter approaches a critical value at whic
The interaction of a cavity with an external field is symmetric under time reversal. Thus, coupling to a resonator is most efficient when the incident light is the time reversed version of a free cavity decay, i.e. when it has a rising exponential sh