The researchers imprinted a moiré pattern on the crustal by shining a light beam stenciled by two twisted lattice masks. Then they shined a second light beam and observed how the beam profile evolved as they changed the masks’ twist angle and the laser powers.
The moiré lattices produced solitons above a certain laser power threshold, depending on the twist angles in the patterning masks. Typically, nonlinearity is a weak phenomenon that only occurs at high laser powers. However, Ye and his team found that their power threshold is quite low — only nanowatts of power is required.
Key to the low power requirement is the flat energy band in the moiré lattice. The photons in optical moiré lattices are squeezed into a narrow range of energies at certain twist angles. That energy rate supports only certain self-trapped modes of light. The light diffraction is therefore much weaker in such flat energy bands, so only a small nonlinear effect is necessary to generate solitons.
“Thanks to the almost flat bands in moiré lattices,” Ye said, “this experiment brings the power threshold down to an extremely low level, representing a big step in soliton research.”
The research was published in Nature Photonics (www.doi.org/10.1038/s41566-020-0679-9).