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Two-dimensional (2D) coupled resonant optical waveguide (CROW), exhibiting topological edge states, provides an efficient platform for designing integrated topological photonic devices. In this paper, we propose an experimentally feasible design of 2D honeycomb CROW photonic structure. The characteristic optical system possesses two-fold and three-fold Dirac points at different positions in the Brillouin zone. The effective gauge fields implemented by the intrinsic pseudo-spin-orbit interaction open up topologically nontrivial bandgaps through the Dirac points. Spatial lattice geometries allow destructive wave interference, leading to a dispersionless, nearly-flat energy band in the vicinity of the three-fold Dirac point in the telecommunication frequency regime. This nontrivial nearly-flat band yields topologically protected edge states. The pertinent physical effects brought about due to non-Hermitian gain/loss medium into the honeycomb CROW device are discussed. The generalized gain-loss lattice with parity-time symmetry decouples the gain and the loss at opposite zigzag edges, leading to purely gain or loss edge channels. Meanwhile, the gain and loss effects on the armchair boundary cancel each other, giving rise to dissipationless edge states in non-Hermitian optical systems. These characteristics underpin the fundamental importance as well as the potential applications in various optical devices such as polarizers, optical couplers, beam splitters and slow light delay lines.
Canonical quantum mechanics postulates Hermitian Hamiltonians to ensure real eigenvalues. Counterintuitively, a non-Hermitian Hamiltonian, satisfying combined parity-time (PT) symmetry, could display entirely real spectra above some phase-transition
The explorations of the quantum-inspired symmetries in optical and photonic systems have witnessed immense research interests both fundamentally and technologically in a wide range of subjects of physics and engineering. One of the principal emerging
The exotic physics emerging in non-Hermitian systems with balanced distributions of gain and loss has drawn a great deal of attention in recent years. These systems exhibit phase transitions and exceptional point singularities in their spectra, at wh
Parity-time (PT) symmetry in non-Hermitian optical systems promises distinct optical effects and applications not found in conservative optics. Its counterpart, anti-PT symmetry, subscribes another class of intriguing optical phenomena and implies co
We introduce a weakly coupled photonic crystal waveguide as a promising and realistic model for all-optical amplification. A symmetric pillar type coupled photonic crystal waveguide consisting of dielectric rods periodically distributed in a free spa