Savannah S. Garmon
Department of Physical Sciences
Osaka Prefecture University
Japan
Anomalous exceptional point and non-Markovian Purcell effect at threshold in 1-D continuum systems
Resonance properties and the typical Markovian dynamics of open quantum systems can be significantly modified or disturbed in the vicinity of a singularity in the density of continuum states. We show that when a quantum emitter is coupled near threshold to a 1-D continuum with a van Hove singularity in the density of states, a characteristic spectral configuration appears involving a bound state, a resonance state and an anti-resonance state, as well as several exceptional points. At one exceptional point appearing below the threshold, the resonance and anti-resonance states coalesce while the bound state instead experiences an avoided crossing. Meanwhile, if one considers the limit in which the coupling g vanishes, all three states converge on the continuum threshold itself. For small g values the eigenvalue and norm of each of these states can be expanded in a Puiseux expansion in terms of powers of g2/3, which suggests a third order exceptional point occurs at the threshold. However, in the actual g→0 limit, only two discrete states in fact coalesce as the system can be reduced to a 2×2 Jordan block; the third state instead merges with the continuum. We further demonstrate the influence of the exceptional point on non-Markovian dynamics characterizing the relaxation process of the quantum emitter in the vicinity of the threshold.