Vacuum radiation and frequency-mixing in linear light-matter systems

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Abstract

Recent progress in photonics has led to a renewed interest in time-varying media that change on timescales comparable to the optical wave oscillation time. However, these studies typically overlook the role of material dispersion that will necessarily imply a delayed temporal response or, stated alternatively, a memory effect. We investigate the influence of the medium memory on a specific effect, i.e. the excitation of quantum vacuum radiation due to the temporal modulation. We construct a framework which reduces the problem to single-particle quantum mechanics, which we then use to study the quantum vacuum radiation. We find that the delayed temporal response changes the vacuum emission properties drastically: frequencies mix, something typically associated with nonlinear processes, despite the system being completely linear. Indeed, this effect is related to the parametric resonances of the light-matter system, and to the parametric driving of the system by frequencies present locally in the drive but not in its spectrum.

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Westerberg, N., Prain, A., Faccio, D., & Öhberg, P. (2019). Vacuum radiation and frequency-mixing in linear light-matter systems. Journal of Physics Communications, 3(6). https://doi.org/10.1088/2399-6528/ab2ab2

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