Non-reciprocal topological solitons in active metamaterials
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Veenstra, Jonas; Gamayun, Oleksandr; Guo, Xiaofei; Sarvi, Anahita; Meinersen, Chris Ventura; Coulais, Corentin
署名单位:
University of Amsterdam
刊物名称:
Nature
ISSN/ISSBN:
0028-4424
DOI:
10.1038/s41586-024-07097-6
发表日期:
2024-03-21
关键词:
dynamics
kink
摘要:
From protein motifs1 to black holes2, topological solitons are pervasive nonlinear excitations that are robust and can be driven by external fields3. So far, existing driving mechanisms all accelerate solitons and antisolitons in opposite directions3,4. Here we introduce a local driving mechanism for solitons that accelerates both solitons and antisolitons in the same direction instead: non-reciprocal driving. To realize this mechanism, we construct an active mechanical metamaterial consisting of non-reciprocally coupled oscillators5-8 subject to a bistable potential9-14. We find that such nonlinearity coaxes non-reciprocal excitations-so-called non-Hermitian skin waves5-8,15-22, which are typically unstable-into robust one-way (anti)solitons. We harness such non-reciprocal topological solitons by constructing an active waveguide capable of transmitting and filtering unidirectional information. Finally, we illustrate this mechanism in another class of metamaterials that shows the breaking of 'supersymmetry'23,24 causing only antisolitons to be driven. Our observations and models demonstrate a subtle interplay between non-reciprocity and topological solitons, whereby solitons create their own driving force by locally straining the material. Beyond the scope of our study, non-reciprocal solitons might provide an efficient driving mechanism for robotic locomotion25 and could emerge in other settings, for example, quantum mechanics26,27, optics28-30 and soft matter31. A local driving mechanism for solitons that accelerates both solitons and antisolitons in the same direction, called non-reciprocal driving, is introduced, showing a subtle interplay between non-reciprocity and topological solitons and providing waveguiding and wave-processing possibilities for other fields.