Controlled generation of pseudospin-mediated vortices in photonic graphene

Daohong Song, Sheng Liu, Vassilis Paltoglou, Daniel Gallardo, Liqin Tang, Jianlin Zhao, Jingjun Xu, Nikolaos K. Efremidis, Zhigang Chen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Wedemonstrate controllable generation and destruction of pseudospin-mediated topological charges (vortices) in the photonic analogy of graphene - optically induced honeycomb lattices (HCLs). When only one of the two sublattices is selectively excited by the probe beams that are momentum-matched onto the Dirac points, a singly-charged optical vortex emerges in the output of the symmetric conical diffraction pattern. Furthermore, flipping of the topological charge is observed as the excitation shifts from sublattice A to sublattice B. Onthe other hand, when both sublattices are simultaneously excited, the conical diffraction pattern becomes highly asymmetric, accompanied by interesting phenomena related to the generation of half-integer vortices and line singularities.Wepresent four different cases of selective excitation using two different approaches; one with three input probe beams that are momentum-matched to the three K valleys, and the other with only two probe beams while the Bloch modes surrounding the third valley are excited due to Bragg reflection. Our experimental results are confirmed by numerical simulation of the paraxial wave equation with aHCL potential as well as by theoretical analysis of the two-dimensional Dirac-Weyl equations directly. These studies indicate that the lattice pseudospin is not just a mathematical formality, but rather it can manifest through its angular momentum transferred to probing optical beams.

Original languageEnglish
Article number034007
Journal2D Materials
Volume2
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 26 Jun 2015

Keywords

  • Dirac equation
  • Photonic graphene
  • Pseudospin
  • Vortices

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Controlled generation of pseudospin-mediated vortices in photonic graphene'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this