Photonic Topological Insulator in Synthetic Dimensions
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Topological phases enable protected transport along the edges of materials, offering immunity against scattering from disorder and imperfections. These phases were suggested and demonstrated not only for electronic systems, but also for electromagnetic waves, cold atoms, acoustics, and even mechanics. Their potential applications range from spintronics and quantum computing to highly efficient lasers. Traditionally, the underlying model of these systems is a spatial lattice in two or three dimensions. However, it recently became clear that many lattice systems can exist also in synthetic dimensions which are not spatial but extend over a different degree of freedom. Thus far, topological insulators in synthetic dimensions were demonstrated only in cold atoms, where synthetic dimensions have now become a useful tool for demonstrating a variety of lattice models that are not available in spatial lattices. Subsequently, efforts have been directed towards realizing topological lattices with synthetic dimensions in photonics, where they are connected to physical phenomena in high-dimensions, interacting photons, and more. Here we demonstrate experimentally the first photonic topological insulator in synthetic dimensions. The ability to study experimentally photonic systems in synthetic dimensions opens the door for a plethora of unexplored physical phenomena ranging from PT-symmetry, exceptional points and unidirectional invisibility to Anderson localization in high dimensions and high-dimensional lattice solitons, topological insulator lasers in synthetic dimensions and more. Our study here paves the way to these exciting phenomena, which are extremely hard (if not impossible) to observe in other physical systems.
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