Exceptional Points for High-Performance Optical Sensing
Non-Hermitian photonics has emerged as a promising field for the development of high-performance optical sensors. The theoretically infinite sensitivity of non-Hermitian sensors to external perturbations in the proximity of exceptional points (EPs) is the main reason for explaining the amount of research effort about this topic. The applications of non-Hermitian sensing are various. Angular velocity sensing has been investigated for the interesting property shown by non-Hermitian optical gyroscopes of the independence of the eigenfrequency splitting (usually adopted as the output of non-Hermitian sensors) from the angular velocity to be sensed. Moreover, several non-Hermitian sensors have been proposed to detect the presence of nanoparticles in the proximity of the sensor. Moreover, refractive index and absorption sensors have also been proposed with EP-based architectures, with applications in a lot of fields. For example, label-free biosensing and chemical analysis can benefit from the increased sensitivity of non-Hermitian photonics, thus promising advancements in medical diagnostics and environmental monitoring