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Quench dynamics in strongly coupled laser cavities

Published 9 Jun 2017 in physics.optics | (1706.02993v3)

Abstract: Strongly coupled dissipative optical cavities with nonlinear interactions give new opportunities to explore symmetry breaking phenomena and phase transitions, Josephson dynamics and quantum criticality. Among the different experimental realizations, photonic crystal coupled nanocavities operating in the laser regime are outstanding systems since nonlinearity, gain/dissipation and intercavity coupling can be judiciously tailored. Yet, although most common scenarios emerge from quasi-dynamical equilibrium where the gain nearly compensates for losses, little is known about far out-of-equilibrium dynamics resulting, for instance, from short pulsed pumping inducing a classical "quench". Here we show that bimodal nanolasers generically display transient dynamics after quench which, when projected onto the nonlasing mode, exhibit superthermal light. Such a mechanism is akin to the fast cooling of a suspension of Brownian particles under gravity, with the intracavity intensity playing the role of the inverse temperature. We implement a simple experimental technique to access the probability density functions, that enabled quantifying the distance from thermal equilibrium --and hence the degree of residual order-- via the Gibbs entropy. This allowed us to further detect mixing of thermal states with coherent broken parity phases, thus paving the road for investigating far nonequilibrium thermodynamics with multimode optical oscillators.

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