Mikael Rechtsman
Aspects of photonic topological insulators
Mikael Rechtsman; Julia Zeuner; Yonatan Plotnik; Yaakov Lumer; Daniel Podolsky; Mordechai Segev; Alexander Szameit
The Pennsylvania State University, USA;
Technion - Israel Institute of Technology;
Friederich-Schiller University, Jena
Great excitement surrounding optical topological protection has recently emerged from the promise of endowing photonic devices with quantum Hall-like robustness. Here, I will present the prediction and realization of a photonic topological insulator for light. Topological insulators (TIs) are solid-state materials that are insulators in the bulk, but conduct electricity along their surfaces - and are intrinsically robust to disorder. In particular, when a surface electron in a TI encounters a defect, it simply goes around it without scattering, always exhibiting -- quite strikingly -- perfect transmission. The structure is composed of an array of coupled helical waveguides; the helicity generates an artificial circularly-polarized force on the photons that breaks time-reversal symmetry. This leads to bands with non-zero Chern number, and thus topologically-protected edge states (protected in the quantum Hall sense -- not by any symmetry). Due to the time-dependent force, the band structure must be solved in the Floquet sense; the result bears close resemblance to that of the quantum anomalous Hall effect. I will then discuss the question of what it means to have topological interface states in non-Hermitian systems, and show new experiments exploring their properties.