17 research outputs found

    Probing bath-induced entanglement in a qubit pair by measuring photon correlations

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    Self-assembled quantum dots are ideal structures in which to test theories of open quantum systems: Confined exciton states can be coherently manipulated and their decoherence properties are dominated by interactions with acoustic phonons. We here describe the interaction of a pair of un-coupled, driven, quantum dot excitons with a common phonon environment, and find that this coupling effectively generates two kinds of interaction between the two quantum dots: An elastic coupling mediated by virtual phonons and an inelastic coupling mediated by real phonons. We show that both of these interactions produce steady state entanglement between the two quantum dot excitons. We also show that photon correlations in the emission of the quantum dots can provide a signature of the common environment. Experiments to demonstrate our predictions are feasible with the state-of-the-art technology and would provide valuable insight into quantum dot carrier-phonon dynamics

    Exciton-polarons in two-dimensional semiconductors and the Tavis-Cummings model

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    The elementary optical excitations of a two-dimensional electron or hole system have been identified as exciton-Fermi-polarons. Nevertheless, the connection between the bound state of an exciton and an electron, termed trion, and exciton-polarons is subject of ongoing debate. Here, we use an analogy to the Tavis-Cummings model of quantum optics to show that an exciton-polaron can be understood as a hybrid quasiparticle -- a coherent superposition of a bare exciton in an unperturbed Fermi sea and a bright collective excitation of many trions. The analogy is valid to the extent that the Chevy Ansatz provides a good description of dynamical screening of excitons and provided the Fermi energy is much smaller than the trion binding energy. We anticipate our results to bring new insight that could help to explain the striking differences between absorption and emission spectra of two-dimensional semiconductors.Comment: 5 page

    Giant paramagnetism induced valley polarization of electrons in charge-tunable monolayer MoSe2

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    For applications exploiting the valley pseudospin degree of freedom in transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers, efficient preparation of electrons or holes in a single valley is essential. Here, we show that a magnetic field of 7 Tesla leads to a near-complete valley polarization of electrons in MoSe2 monolayer with a density 1.6x10^{12} cm^{-2}; in the absence of exchange interactions favoring single-valley occupancy, a similar degree of valley polarization would have required a pseudospin g-factor exceeding 40. To investigate the magnetic response, we use polarization resolved photoluminescence as well as resonant reflection measurements. In the latter, we observe gate voltage dependent transfer of oscillator strength from the exciton to the attractive-Fermi-polaron: stark differences in the spectrum of the two light helicities provide a confirmation of valley polarization. Our findings suggest an interaction induced giant paramagnetic response of MoSe2, which paves the way for valleytronics applications

    Transport of neutral optical excitations using electric fields

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    Mobile quantum impurities interacting with a fermionic bath form quasiparticles known as Fermi polarons. We demonstrate that a force applied to the bath particles can generate a drag force of similar magnitude acting on the impurities, realizing a novel, nonperturbative Coulomb drag effect. To prove this, we calculate the fully self-consistent, frequency-dependent transconductivity at zero temperature in the Baym-Kadanoff conserving approximation. We apply our theory to excitons and exciton polaritons interacting with a bath of charge carriers in a doped semiconductor embedded in a microcavity. In external electric and magnetic fields, the drag effect enables electrical control of excitons and may pave the way for the implementation of gauge fields for excitons and polaritons. Moreover, a reciprocal effect may facilitate optical manipulation of electron transport. Our findings establish transport measurements as a novel, powerful tool for probing the many-body physics of mobile quantum impurities.Comment: 18 + 11 pages, 4 figure

    Fermi polaron-polaritons in charge-tunable atomically thin semiconductors

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    The dynamics of a mobile quantum impurity in a degenerate Fermi system is a fundamental problem in many-body physics. The interest in this field has been renewed due to recent ground-breaking experiments with ultracold Fermi gases. Optical creation of an exciton or a polariton in a two-dimensional electron system embedded in a microcavity constitutes a new frontier for this field due to an interplay between cavity coupling favouring ultralow-mass polariton formation6 and exciton–electron interactions leading to polaron or trion formation. Here, we present cavity spectroscopy of gate-tunable monolayer MoSe2 exhibiting strongly bound trion and polaron resonances, as well as non-perturbative coupling to a single microcavity mode. As the electron density is increased, the oscillator strength determined from the polariton splitting is gradually transferred from the higher-energy repulsive exciton-polaron resonance to the lower-energy attractive exciton-polaron state. Simultaneous observation of polariton formation in both attractive and repulsive branches indicates a new regime of polaron physics where the polariton impurity mass can be much smaller than that of the electrons. Our findings shed new light on optical response of semiconductors in the presence of free carriers by identifying the Fermi polaron nature of excitonic resonances and constitute a first step in investigation of a new class of degenerate Bose–Fermi mixtures.Physic

    Nanowire Defined Double Quantum Dot Maser

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    Motivated by ongoing experiments in the group of Jason Petta (Princeton University), we investigate a system of double-quantum dot coupled to a cavity and also coupled to a lead of conducting electrons. These experiments provide a platform to investigate several aspects of non-equilibrium physics studied in condensed matter physics, quantum optics and lasers, thus bringing these different fields under a common umbrella. The double-quantum dot coupled to a cavity is well calibrated and a tunable setup helping to probe the rich physics of Jaynes Cummings Hamiltonian and its various extensions. It captures the physics of conventional lasers (in some parameter regimes) and even goes beyond it providing an example of a non-conventional maser. The aim of the thesis is broadly three-fold in nature. Firstly, we will arrive at an effective Hamiltonian and accompanying Liouvillians from first principles by studying the role of phonons and conducting electrons. We show that phonons provide a systematic path to understand the origin of the relaxation and dephasing Lindblad operators which are usually phenomenologically added. The role of conduction electron bath as a source of incoherent pump (to the gain medium) has been established and quantified. Secondly, we compute analytically and numerically the various experimentally measured quantities of interest such as the transmission amplitude, phase-response and the electron current across the double dot. The analytics (largely based using analogy with lasers) and exact numerics have been compared thereby helping us to put-forward the various regimes of validity of several systematic approximations in various parameter regimes. We believe that such an involved quantitative understanding of validity regimes is central to exploring the physics coming out of these recent experiments. Thirdly, we make an extensive comparison between our theory and recent experimental data (Yinyu Liu et al, Private Communication, 2013). We show that our theoretical results stemming largely from first principles agree with most of the experimental data highlighting the role of phonons. However, some open questions remain due to discrepancy between theory and experiment in some regimes of parameters

    Exciton–polarons in two-dimensional semiconductors and the Tavis–Cummings model

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    The elementary optical excitations of a two-dimensional electron or hole system have been identified as exciton-Fermi-polarons. Nevertheless, the connection between the bound state of an exciton and an electron, termed trion, and exciton–polarons is subject of ongoing debate. Here, we use an analogy to the Tavis–Cummings model of quantum optics to show that an exciton–polaron can be understood as a hybrid quasiparticle—a coherent superposition of a bare exciton in an unperturbed Fermi sea and a bright collective excitation of many trions. The analogy is valid to the extent that the Chevy Ansatz provides a good description of dynamical screening of excitons and provided the Fermi energy is much smaller than the trion binding energy. We anticipate our results to bring new insight that could help to explain the striking differences between absorption and emission spectra of two-dimensional semiconductorsISSN:1631-0705ISSN:1878-153
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