RESUMO
Coherent perfect absorption (CPA) is an interference process associated with the zeros of the scattering matrix of interest for optical computing, data processing, and sensing. However, the noise properties of CPA remain relatively unexplored. Here, we demonstrate that CPA thermal noise signals exhibit a unique property: they are orthogonal to the signals transmitted through the network. In turn, such property enables a variety of thermal noise management effects, such as the physical separability of thermal noise and transmitted signals, and "externally lossless" networks that internally host radiative heat transfer processes. We believe that our results provide a new perspective on the many CPA technologies currently under development.
RESUMO
Wilkinson power dividers (WPDs) are a popular element in RF and microwave technologies known for providing isolation capabilities. However, the benefits that WPDs could offer to integrated photonic systems are far less studied. Here, we investigate the thermal emission from and the noise performance of silicon-on-insulator (SOI) WPDs. We find that WPDs exhibit a noiseless port, with important implications for receiving systems and absorption-based quantum state transformations. At the same time, the thermal signals exiting noisy ports exhibit nontrivial correlations, opening the possibility for noise cancellation. We analyze passive and active networks containing WPDs showing how such nontrivial correlations can prevent the amplification of the thermal noise introduced by WPDs while benefiting from their isolation capabilities. Using this insight, we propose a modified ring-resonator amplifier that improves by N times the SNR in comparison with conventional traveling wave and ring-resonator amplifiers, with N being the number of inputs/outputs of the WPD. We believe that our results represent an important step forward in the implementation of SOI-WPDs and their integration in complex photonic networks, particularly for mid-IR and quantum photonics applications.