arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:2010.14513 [cond-mat.mes-hall]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Correspondence between non-Hermitian topology and directional amplification in the presence of disorder

Clara C. Wanjura, Matteo Brunelli, Andreas Nunnenkamp

Published 2020-10-27Version 1

In order for non-Hermitian (NH) topological effects to be relevant for practical applications, it is necessary to study disordered systems. In the absence of disorder, certain driven-dissipative cavity arrays with engineered non-local dissipation display directional amplification when associated with a non-trivial winding number of the NH dynamic matrix. In this work, we show analytically that the correspondence between NH topology and directional amplification holds even in the presence of disorder. When a system with non-trivial topology is tuned close to the exceptional point, perfect non-reciprocity (quantified by a vanishing reverse gain) is preserved for arbitrarily strong on-site disorder. For bounded disorder, we derive simple bounds for the probability distribution of the scattering matrix elements. These bounds show that the essential features associated with non-trivial NH topology, namely that the end-to-end forward (reverse) gain grows (is suppressed) exponentially with system size, are preserved in disordered systems. NH topology in cavity arrays is robust and can thus be exploited for practical applications.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1902.08479 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (Published 2019-02-22)
Non-Hermitian Topology of Exceptional Points
arXiv:2406.14303 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (Published 2024-06-20)
Non-Hermitian topology of transport in Chern insulators
arXiv:2111.02263 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (Published 2021-11-03)
Non-Hermitian physics without gain or loss: the skin effect of reflected waves