Avoided crossings, degeneracies and Berry phases in the spectrum of quantum noise of driven-dissipative bosonic systems

Abstract

Avoided crossings are fundamental phenomena in quantum mechanics and photonics that originate from the interaction between coupled energy levels and have been extensively studied in linear dispersive dynamics. Their manifestation in open, driven-dissipative systems, however, where nonlinear dynamics of quantum fluctuations come into play, remains largely unexplored. In this work, we analyze the hitherto unexplored occurrence of avoided and genuine crossings in the spectrum of quantum noise. We demonstrate that avoided crossings arise naturally when a single parameter is varied, leading to hypersensitivity of the associated singular vectors and suggesting the presence of genuine crossings (diabolical points) in nearby systems. We show that these spectral features can be deliberately designed, highlighting the possibility of programming the quantum noise response of photonic systems. As a notable example, such control can be exploited to generate broad, flat-band squeezing spectra - a desirable feature for enhancing degaussification protocols. Our analysis is based on a detailed study of the Analytic Bloch-Messiah Decomposition (ABMD), which we use to characterize the parameter-dependent behavior of singular values and their corresponding vectors. This study provides new insights into the structure of multimode quantum correlations and offers a theoretical framework for the experimental exploitation of complex quantum optical systems.

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