Mirror-Symmetry-Enforced Photonic Altermagnet

Abstract

Altermagnets host momentum-dependent spin splitting without net magnetization, a symmetry-enforced band phenomenon whose photonic analogues have so far been realized only in square lattices governed by fourfold rotation. Here we introduce a photonic altermagnet on a hexagonal lattice whose helicity splitting is governed by mirror rather than rotational symmetry. Elliptical chiral elements of alternating handedness, placed at the vertices of a regular hexagon, leave the two opposite-chirality sublattices connected only by chirality reversal combined with a mirror reflection. Full-wave simulations reveal mirror-related splitting of the two opposite-helicity branches in the band structure and isofrequency contours, with the channels exchanged when the ellipse orientation is reversed. Using a finite photonic crystal slab, we show that such splitting separates a linearly polarized beam into handedness-resolved channels, thus enabling beam splitting and direction-selective helicity filtering with target-helicity output fractions above 0.85 and output paths continuously tunable through the ellipse rotation angle. These results extend photonic altermagnetism to a previously unexplored lattice-symmetry class and establish mirror-symmetric chiral textures as building blocks for altermagnetism-inspired on-chip chiral photonics.

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