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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Exceptional points in diamond optomechanics
arXiv
Authors: Waleed El-Sayed, Elham Zohari, Joe Itoi, Peyman Parsa, Gustavo de Oliveira Luiz, Joseph E. Losby, Misa Hayashida, Marek Malac, Paul E. Barclay
Year
2026
Paper ID
68219
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
161
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Multimode cavity optomechanical systems allow light to couple otherwise non-interacting mechanical resonators, enabling non-Hermitian phenomena such as exceptional points, where eigenfrequencies and eigenvectors of coupled modes coalesce. Accessing an exceptional point and its nearby parameter space is a first step towards chiral mode dynamics and topological state transfer. Diamond optomechanical devices support strong coherent optomechanical coupling required to tune resonances to an exceptional point, as well as strain-coupling to spin-defects for hybrid quantum technologies, but have not yet been used for multimode non-Hermitian physics. Here we tune to an exceptional point in a diamond optomechanical crystal, which uses structural symmetry breaking to produce two high-frequency mechanical resonances coupled to an optical cavity. The exceptional point is reached within a stable operating window below the phonon-lasing threshold, and we observe asymmetric redistribution of optomechanical damping and anti-damping between hybridized modes. These results establish diamond optomechanical crystals as a platform for non-Hermitian optomechanics, opening routes to topological mechanical dynamics in hybrid spin-phonon interfaces.
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- This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- Multimode cavity optomechanical systems allow light to couple otherwise non-interacting mechanical resonators, enabling non-Hermitian phenomena such as exceptional points...
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