4 research outputs found
Observation of open scattering channels
The existence of fully transmissive eigenchannels ("open channels") in a
random scattering medium is a counterintuitive and unresolved prediction of
random matrix theory. The smoking gun of such open channels, namely a bimodal
distribution of the transmission efficiencies of the scattering channels, has
so far eluded experimental observation. We observe an experimental distribution
of transmission efficiencies that obeys the predicted bimodal
Dorokhov-Mello-Pereyra-Kumar distribution. Thereby we show the existence of
open channels in a linear optical scattering system. The characterization of
the scattering system is carried out by a quantum-optical readout method. We
find that missing a single channel in the measurement already prevents
detection of the open channels, illustrating why their observation has proven
so elusive until now. Our work confirms a long-standing prediction of random
matrix theory underlying wave transport through disordered systems.Comment: 9 pages including methods and supplementary materials. 3 figure