142 research outputs found
Polarization Control of the Non-linear Emission on Semiconductor Microcavities
The degree of circular polarization () of the non-linear emission in
semiconductor microcavities is controlled by changing the exciton-cavity
detuning. The polariton relaxation towards \textbf{K} cavity-like
states is governed by final-state stimulated scattering. The helicity of the
emission is selected due to the lifting of the degeneracy of the spin
levels at \textbf{K} . At short times after a pulsed excitation
reaches very large values, either positive or negative, as a result of
stimulated scattering to the spin level of lowest energy ( spin for
positive/negative detuning).Comment: 8 pages, 3 eps figures, RevTeX, Physical Review Letters (accepted
Optical Study of GaAs quantum dots embedded into AlGaAs nanowires
We report on the photoluminescence characterization of GaAs quantum dots
embedded into AlGaAs nano-wires. Time integrated and time resolved
photoluminescence measurements from both an array and a single quantum
dot/nano-wire are reported. The influence of the diameter sizes distribution is
evidenced in the optical spectroscopy data together with the presence of
various crystalline phases in the AlGaAs nanowires.Comment: 5 page, 5 figure
Theoretical analysis of quantum dynamics in 1D lattices: Wannier-Stark description
This papers presents a formalism describing the dynamics of a quantum
particle in a one-dimensional tilted time-dependent lattice. The description
uses the Wannier-Stark states, which are localized in each site of the lattice
and provides a simple framework leading to fully-analytical developments.
Particular attention is devoted to the case of a time-dependent potential,
which results in a rich variety of quantum coherent dynamics is found.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, submitted to PR
Long-lived excitons in GaN/AlN nanowire heterostructures
GaN/AlN nanowire heterostructures can display photoluminescence (PL) decay
times on the order of microseconds that persist up to room temperature. Doping
the GaN nanodisk insertions with Ge can reduce these PL decay times by two
orders of magnitude. These phenomena are explained by the three-dimensional
electric field distribution within the GaN nanodisks, which has an axial
component in the range of a few MV/cm associated to the spontaneous and
piezoelectric polarization, and a radial piezoelectric contribution associated
to the shear components of the lattice strain. At low dopant concentrations, a
large electron-hole separation in both the axial and radial directions is
present. The relatively weak radial electric fields, which are about one order
of magnitude smaller than the axial fields, are rapidly screened by doping.
This bidirectional screening leads to a radial and axial centralization of the
hole underneath the electron, and consequently, to large decreases in PL decay
times, in addition to luminescence blue shifts
Probing exciton localization in non-polar GaN/AlN Quantum Dots by single dot optical spectroscopy
We present an optical spectroscopy study of non-polar GaN/AlN quantum dots by
time-resolved photoluminescence and by microphotoluminescence. Isolated quantum
dots exhibit sharp emission lines, with linewidths in the 0.5-2 meV range due
to spectral diffusion. Such linewidths are narrow enough to probe the inelastic
coupling of acoustic phonons to confined carriers as a function of temperature.
This study indicates that the carriers are laterally localized on a scale that
is much smaller than the quantum dot size. This conclusion is further confirmed
by the analysis of the decay time of the luminescence
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