Induced transparency by interference or polarization.
Changqing WangXuefeng JiangWilliam R SweeneyChia Wei HsuYiming LiuGuangming ZhaoBo PengMengzhen ZhangLiang JiangA Douglas StoneLan YangPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2021)
Polarization of optical fields is a crucial degree of freedom in the all-optical analogue of electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT). However, the physical origins of EIT and polarization-induced phenomena have not been well distinguished, which can lead to confusion in associated applications such as slow light and optical/quantum storage. Here we study the polarization effects in various optical EIT systems. We find that a polarization mismatch between whispering gallery modes in two indirectly coupled resonators can induce a narrow transparency window in the transmission spectrum resembling the EIT lineshape. However, such polarization-induced transparency (PIT) is distinct from EIT: It originates from strong polarization rotation effects and shows a unidirectional feature. The coexistence of PIT and EIT provides additional routes for the manipulation of light flow in optical resonator systems.