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arxiv: 2605.05018 · v1 · submitted 2026-05-06 · 🪐 quant-ph

Polarization-Controlled Photon Mode Switching and Photon--Magnon Coupling in a Planar Cavity--Magnonic System

Pith reviewed 2026-05-08 16:09 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🪐 quant-ph
keywords polarization selectivityphoton-magnon couplingplanar cavity-magnonic systemresonator orientationmode switchingYIG thin filmelectric-LC resonatorhybridization
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The pith

Rotating the resonator switches between two photon modes and tunes their coupling to magnons via polarization selectivity.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper shows that the orientation of a planar electric-LC resonator relative to the microwave polarization controls which of two orthogonal photon modes at 3.93 and 5.73 GHz couples to magnons in an adjacent YIG film. As the angle changes, one mode's coupling strength grows while the other's shrinks, producing tunable hybridization without shifting frequencies. A sympathetic reader would care because this geometric control offers a direct handle on photon-magnon interactions in flat layouts. The work reproduces the switching with a damped circuit model and captures the hybrid evolution with a three-mode Hamiltonian. If the central claim holds, it supplies a practical route to adjustable couplings in planar cavity-magnonic devices.

Core claim

The central claim is that resonator-orientation-driven polarization selectivity establishes a mechanism for controllable photon-magnon interactions in planar architectures. At zero degrees only the lower-frequency photon mode is excited, yielding a coupling of 56.5 MHz; as the angle rises both channels activate, with the lower-mode coupling increasing to 98 MHz by 60 degrees before vanishing at 90 degrees while the higher-mode coupling falls from 76 MHz to 30 MHz. The equivalent circuit model with intrinsic and extrinsic damping reproduces the polarization-driven mode switching, and the effective three-mode Hamiltonian accurately tracks the coupled-mode evolution, including observed and mode

What carries the argument

Polarization selectivity of the two orthogonal photon modes in the electric-LC resonator, governed by the resonator's orientation relative to the microwave-field polarization, which redistributes excitation and coupling strength between the modes.

If this is right

  • At zero degrees only the lower-frequency photon mode couples to the magnon, with strength 56.5 MHz.
  • At intermediate angles both modes are active, the lower-mode coupling rising to 98 MHz by 60 degrees before dropping to zero at 90 degrees.
  • The higher-mode coupling falls steadily from 76 MHz to 30 MHz between 30 and 90 degrees.
  • The circuit model with damping reproduces the full angular switching of mode excitation.
  • The three-mode Hamiltonian describes the redistribution of coupling strengths across the measured angles and the symmetry-related transition near 154.3 degrees.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same orientation control could be applied to other planar resonator geometries to achieve multi-channel magnon tuning.
  • Combining this geometric handle with existing frequency or field tuning would add an independent control axis for hybrid quantum systems.
  • The redistribution between competing interaction channels suggests the approach may generalize to devices using multiple magnon modes or different magnetic films.

Load-bearing premise

The observed angular dependence of the couplings arises solely from polarization selectivity of the two photon modes, with no other angle-dependent effects such as changes in radiative damping or stray fields altering the interaction strengths significantly.

What would settle it

Independent measurements of photon-mode excitation amplitudes and damping rates at each angle, without the YIG film present, that fail to predict the hybrid splittings once the film is added would show the polarization-selectivity picture is incomplete.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.05018 by Abhishek Maurya, Biswanath Bhoi, Bojong Kim, Rajeev Singh, Sachin Verma, Sang-Koog Kim.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: FIG. 1. (a) Schematic illustration of the simulation geometry used to investigate photon-mode excitation in the planar hybrid view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: FIG. 2. Simulated surface-current distributions of the ELCR at the photon-mode resonances for different resonator orientations. view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: FIG. 3. Equivalent-circuit description of the photon-only ELCR–microstrip system. (a) Lumped-element circuit model of the view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: FIG. 4. Rotation-dependent radiative damping of the two photon modes. (a) Extracted extrinsic damping of photon mode-1 ( view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: FIG. 5. Polarization-controlled photon–magnon coupling in the ELCR–YIG platform. (a) Schematic of the experimental view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: FIG. 6. Experimental and calculated photon–magnon hy view at source ↗
Figure 8
Figure 8. Figure 8: FIG. 8. Angular evolution of the radiative-loss imbalance view at source ↗
read the original abstract

This work presents polarization-selective photon-magnon coupling (PMC) in a planar cavity-magnonic platform consisting of an electric-LC resonator (ELCR) side-coupled to a microstrip transmission line and integrated with a yttrium iron garnet (YIG) thin film. The ELCR supports two orthogonal photon modes at $\sim 3.93$ GHz and $\sim 5.73$ GHz, whose excitation and radiative damping are governed by the resonator orientation relative to the microwave-field polarization. Rotating the resonator enables controlled switching between these modes and tunable photon-magnon hybridization. An equivalent circuit model including intrinsic and extrinsic damping successfully reproduces the polarization-driven mode switching, while an effective three-mode Hamiltonian accurately captures the coupled-mode evolution. The results reveal strong angular tunability of the PMC strength through redistribution between two competing interaction channels. At $\theta = 0^\circ$, only the lower-frequency photon mode is excited, yielding $g_{31}=56.5$ MHz, while the higher-frequency mode remains inactive. As the angle increases, both channels become active: $g_{31}$ increases from $56.5$ to $98$ MHz over $0^\circ$-$60^\circ$ before vanishing at $90^\circ$, whereas $g_{23}$ decreases from $76$ to $30$ MHz over $30^\circ$-$90^\circ$. The observed evolution yields a measured transition near $25.7^\circ$ and a symmetry-related model-predicted transition near $154.3^\circ$. These findings establish resonator-orientation--driven polarization selectivity as a versatile mechanism for controllable photon--magnon interactions in planar architectures.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

3 major / 1 minor

Summary. The paper demonstrates polarization-selective photon-magnon coupling in a planar system consisting of an electric-LC resonator (ELCR) side-coupled to a microstrip line and integrated with a YIG thin film. Rotating the resonator orientation relative to the microwave polarization enables switching between two orthogonal photon modes (~3.93 GHz and ~5.73 GHz) and tunable hybridization, with an equivalent-circuit model reproducing the mode switching and a three-mode Hamiltonian capturing the coupled evolution. Reported coupling strengths show strong angular dependence: g31 increases from 56.5 MHz to 98 MHz over 0°–60° before vanishing at 90°, while g23 decreases from 76 MHz to 30 MHz over 30°–90°, with a transition near 25.7°.

Significance. If the angular dependence of the couplings is confirmed to arise solely from polarization-driven redistribution between the orthogonal photon modes, this establishes a practical, geometry-based mechanism for controllable photon-magnon interactions in planar architectures, with potential utility in magnonic signal processing and hybrid quantum devices. The reproduction of data by both the equivalent-circuit model and the three-mode Hamiltonian is a clear strength, as is the identification of symmetry-related transitions at 25.7° and 154.3°.

major comments (3)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: The coupling values (g31 ranging 56.5–98 MHz, g23 ranging 76–30 MHz) are presented without indicating whether they are independently predicted from geometry or obtained by fitting the three-mode Hamiltonian to spectra; this leaves open whether the model is validated or tuned to match the data.
  2. [Results] The manuscript states that the equivalent-circuit model and three-mode Hamiltonian reproduce the observed spectra and hybridization, yet no raw transmission spectra, error bars, or fit residuals are provided, preventing quantitative assessment of how well the models capture the data and whether the extracted g values are robust.
  3. [Discussion] The central claim that angular tunability arises solely from polarization selectivity of the two photon modes (with redistribution between g31 and g23 channels) is load-bearing but unvalidated against independent controls; no measurements or simulations isolate polarization effects from possible angle-dependent contributions such as changes in radiative damping or ELCR–YIG spatial overlap when the resonator is rotated.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] Clarify in the abstract or methods how the 'measured transition near 25.7°' and 'model-predicted transition near 154.3°' are quantitatively determined from the data or Hamiltonian.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

3 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful and constructive review of our manuscript. We address each major comment below and indicate the revisions we will implement.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The coupling values (g31 ranging 56.5–98 MHz, g23 ranging 76–30 MHz) are presented without indicating whether they are independently predicted from geometry or obtained by fitting the three-mode Hamiltonian to spectra; this leaves open whether the model is validated or tuned to match the data.

    Authors: The reported coupling strengths g31 and g23 are extracted by fitting the three-mode Hamiltonian to the measured transmission spectra at each angle. The equivalent-circuit model, which is independent of the Hamiltonian, predicts the polarization-driven mode switching and the angular redistribution of couplings directly from the resonator geometry and orientation. We will revise the abstract to explicitly state that the g values are obtained from spectral fits while the models validate the observed angular trends without additional tuning. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Results] The manuscript states that the equivalent-circuit model and three-mode Hamiltonian reproduce the observed spectra and hybridization, yet no raw transmission spectra, error bars, or fit residuals are provided, preventing quantitative assessment of how well the models capture the data and whether the extracted g values are robust.

    Authors: We agree that raw data and fit-quality metrics are needed for quantitative assessment. In the revised manuscript we will include representative raw transmission spectra (with error bars from repeated measurements) together with the model fits and residuals in the supplementary information. This will allow direct evaluation of agreement and confirm the robustness of the extracted couplings. revision: yes

  3. Referee: [Discussion] The central claim that angular tunability arises solely from polarization selectivity of the two photon modes (with redistribution between g31 and g23 channels) is load-bearing but unvalidated against independent controls; no measurements or simulations isolate polarization effects from possible angle-dependent contributions such as changes in radiative damping or ELCR–YIG spatial overlap when the resonator is rotated.

    Authors: The equivalent-circuit model is formulated to include only the polarization-dependent excitation and damping arising from the resonator orientation relative to the fixed microwave polarization; it reproduces the data without invoking angle-dependent damping or overlap changes. Because the YIG film remains stationary and the ELCR rotation is in-plane, spatial-overlap variations are negligible by design. To strengthen the isolation of polarization, we will add supplementary simulations that independently vary damping and overlap while holding polarization fixed, demonstrating that only the polarization term reproduces the observed angular dependence. revision: partial

Circularity Check

1 steps flagged

Coupling constants g31/g23 are fitted to spectra then presented as model-captured angular evolution

specific steps
  1. fitted input called prediction [Abstract (and implied results section describing the three-mode Hamiltonian)]
    "an effective three-mode Hamiltonian accurately captures the coupled-mode evolution. ... At θ = 0°, only the lower-frequency photon mode is excited, yielding g31=56.5 MHz, ... g31 increases from 56.5 to 98 MHz over 0°-60° ... whereas g23 decreases from 76 to 30 MHz over 30°-90°."

    The quoted g31 and g23 numbers are the fitted parameters that were adjusted to reproduce the observed hybridization gaps; the Hamiltonian is then said to 'capture' the evolution whose inputs were those same fitted values. No independent calculation of the couplings from the ELCR current distribution, YIG overlap, or polarization projection is supplied, so the angular dependence is not a prediction but a re-statement of the fit.

full rationale

The paper states that the three-mode Hamiltonian 'accurately captures the coupled-mode evolution' and reports specific g31 and g23 values that vary with angle. These values are extracted by fitting the Hamiltonian to the measured transmission spectra rather than being derived from the resonator geometry or polarization overlap integrals. Consequently the claimed 'strong angular tunability through redistribution between two competing interaction channels' reduces to a successful numerical fit of angle-dependent parameters; the model reproduces the data by construction once the couplings are allowed to vary with θ.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

2 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on the assumption that the two photon modes are strictly orthogonal and that their excitation is governed only by the projection of the microwave field onto the resonator axes. The coupling strengths g31 and g23 are treated as angle-dependent parameters extracted from data rather than derived from first principles.

free parameters (2)
  • g31(theta)
    Coupling strength between lower photon mode and magnon mode, reported as increasing from 56.5 MHz to 98 MHz between 0° and 60°; appears fitted to spectra.
  • g23(theta)
    Coupling strength between higher photon mode and magnon mode, reported as decreasing from 76 MHz to 30 MHz between 30° and 90°; appears fitted to spectra.
axioms (2)
  • domain assumption The ELCR supports two orthogonal photon modes whose radiative damping is determined solely by orientation relative to the incident microwave polarization.
    Invoked to explain the mode switching and the vanishing of one channel at 90°.
  • domain assumption An effective three-mode Hamiltonian accurately captures the coupled-mode evolution without additional loss channels or nonlinearities.
    Used to model the hybridization and extract the quoted g values.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5632 in / 1671 out tokens · 34803 ms · 2026-05-08T16:09:09.327342+00:00 · methodology

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