104 research outputs found
Searching for the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang phase in microcavity polaritons
Recent approximate analytical work has suggested that, at certain values of
the external pump, the optical parametric oscillator (OPO) regime of
microcavity polaritons may provide a long sought realisation of
Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) physics in 2D. Here, by solving the full microscopic
model numerically using the truncated Wigner method, we prove that this
predicted KPZ phase for OPO is robust against the appearance of vortices or
other effects. For those pump strengths, spatial correlations in the direction
perpendicular to the pump, and the distribution of phase fluctuations, match
closely to the forms characteristic of the KPZ universality. This strongly
indicates the viability of observing KPZ behaviour in future polariton OPO
experiments
Searching for the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang phase in microcavity polaritons
Recent analytical work has shown that, at certain values of the external
pump, the optical parametric oscillator (OPO) regime of microcavity polaritons
may provide a realisation of Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) physics in 2D. Here, we
verify this by solving the full microscopic model numerically using the
truncated Wigner method, and studying the first order spatial correlations. For
the predicted pump strengths, these correlations decay much faster and,
perpendicular to the pump, fit closely to the stretched exponential form
predicted by the KPZ equation, in contrast to the usual algebraic decay. This
strongly indicates the viability of observing KPZ behaviour in future polariton
OPO experiments.Comment: Main text (6 pages, 5 figures) plus supplementary material (3 pages,
5 figures
Kibble-Zurek Mechanism in Driven Dissipative Systems Crossing a Nonequilibrium Phase Transition
The Kibble-Zurek mechanism constitutes one of the most fascinating and universal phenomena in the physics of critical systems. It describes the formation of domains and the spontaneous nucleation of topological defects when a system is driven across a phase transition exhibiting spontaneous symmetry breaking. While a characteristic dependence of the defect density on the speed at which the transition is crossed was observed in a vast range of equilibrium condensed matter systems, its extension to intrinsically driven dissipative systems is a matter of ongoing research. In this Letter, we numerically confirm the Kibble-Zurek mechanism in a paradigmatic family of driven dissipative quantum systems, namely exciton-polaritons in microcavities. Our findings show how the concepts of universality and critical dynamics extend to driven dissipative systems that do not conserve energy or particle number nor satisfy a detailed balance condition
Kibble-Zurek mechanism in driven-dissipative systems crossing a non-equilibrium phase transition
The Kibble-Zurek mechanism constitutes one of the most fascinating and
universal phenomena in the physics of critical systems. It describes the
formation of domains and the spontaneous nucleation of topological defects when
a system is driven across a phase transition exhibiting spontaneous symmetry
breaking. While a characteristic dependence of the defect density on the speed
at which the transition is crossed was observed in a vast range of equilibrium
condensed matter systems, its extension to intrinsically driven-dissipative
systems is a matter of ongoing research. In this work we numerically confirm
the Kibble-Zurek mechanism in a paradigmatic family of driven-dissipative
quantum systems, namely exciton-polaritons in microcavities. Our findings show
how the concepts of universality and critical dynamics extend to
driven-dissipative systems that do not conserve energy or particle number nor
satisfy a detailed balance condition
Vortex and half-vortex dynamics in a spinor quantum fluid of interacting polaritons
Spinorial or multi-component Bose-Einstein condensates may sustain fractional
quanta of circulation, vorticant topological excitations with half integer
windings of phase and polarization. Matter-light quantum fluids, such as
microcavity polaritons, represent a unique test bed for realising strongly
interacting and out-of-equilibrium condensates. The direct access to the phase
of their wavefunction enables us to pursue the quest of whether half vortices
---rather than full integer vortices--- are the fundamental topological
excitations of a spinor polariton fluid. Here, we are able to directly generate
by resonant pulsed excitations, a polariton fluid carrying either the half or
full vortex states as initial condition, and to follow their coherent evolution
using ultrafast holography. Surprisingly we observe a rich phenomenology that
shows a stable evolution of a phase singularity in a single component as well
as in the full vortex state, spiraling, splitting and branching of the initial
cores under different regimes and the proliferation of many vortex anti-vortex
pairs in self generated circular ripples. This allows us to devise the
interplay of nonlinearity and sample disorder in shaping the fluid and driving
the phase singularities dynamicsComment: New version complete with revised modelization, discussion and added
material. 8 pages, 7 figures. Supplementary videos:
https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B0QCllnLqdyBfmc2ai0yVF9fa2g2VnZodGUwemVkLThBb3BoOVRKRDJMS2dUdjlZdkRTQk
Properties of the signal mode in the polariton optical parametric oscillator regime
Theoretical analyses of the polariton optical parametric oscillator (OPO) regime often rely on a mean-field approach based on the complex Gross-Pitaevskii equations in a three-mode approximation, where only three momentum states, the signal, pump, and idler, are assumed to be significantly occupied. This approximation, however, lacks a constraint to uniquely determine the signal and idler momenta. In contrast, multimode numerical simulations and experiments show a unique momentum structure for the OPO states. In this work we show that an estimate for the signal momentum chosen by the system can be found from a simple analysis of the pump-only configuration. We use this estimate to investigate how the chosen signal momentum depends on the properties of the drive
Twist of generalized skyrmions and spin vortices in a polariton superfluid
We study the spin vortices and skyrmions coherently imprinted into an exciton-polariton condensate on a planar semiconductor microcavity. We demonstrate that the presence of a polarization anisotropy can induce a complex dynamics of these structured topologies, leading to the twist of their circuitation on the Poincare sphere of polarizations. The theoretical description of the results carries the concept of generalized quantum vortices in two-component superfluids, which are conformal with polarization loops around an arbitrary axis in the pseudospin space
Dynamical Critical Exponents in Driven-Dissipative Quantum Systems
We study the phase ordering of parametrically and incoherently driven microcavity polaritons after an
infinitely rapid quench across the critical region. We confirm that the system, despite its driven-dissipative
nature, satisfies the dynamical scaling hypothesis for both driving schemes by exhibiting self-similar
patterns for the two-point correlator at late times of the phase ordering. We show that polaritons are
characterized by the dynamical critical exponent z â 2 with topological defects playing a fundamental role
in the dynamics, giving logarithmic corrections both to the power-law decay of the number of vortices and
to the associated growth of the characteristic length scale
Pulse, polarization and topology shaping of polariton fluids
Here we present different approaches to ultrafast pulse and polarization shaping, based on a âquantum fluidâ platform of polaritons. Indeed we exploit the normal modes of two dimensional polariton fluids made of strong coupled quantum well excitons and microcavity photons, by rooting different polarization and topological states into their sub-picosecond Rabi oscillations. Coherent control of two resonant excitation pulses allows us to prepare the desired state of the polariton, taking benefit from its four-component features given by the combination of the two normal modes with the two degrees of polarization. An ultrafast imaging based on the digital off-axis holography technique is implemented to study the polariton complex wavefunction with time and space resolution. We show in order coherent control of the polariton state on the Bloch sphere, an ultrafast polarization sweeping of the PoincarĂ© sphere, and the dynamical twist of full PoincarĂ© states such as the skyrmion on the sphere itself. Finally, we realize a new kind of ultrafast swirling vortices by adding the angular momentum degree of freedom to the two-pulse scheme. These oscillating topology states are characterized by one or more inner phase singularities tubes which spirals around the axis of propagation. The mechanism is devised in the splitting of the vortex into the upper and lower polaritons, resulting in an oscillatory exchange of energy and angular momentum and in the emitted time and space structured photonic packets
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