968 research outputs found
Polariton-mediated Raman scattering in microcavities: A Green's function approach
We present calculations of the intensity of polariton-mediated inelastic
light scattering in semiconductor microcavities within a Green's function
framework. In addition to reproducing the strong coupling of light and matter,
this method also enables the inclusion of damping mechanisms in a consistent
way. Our results show excellent agreement with recent Raman scattering
experiments.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figur
Cavity polariton optomechanics: Polariton path to fully resonant dispersive coupling in optomechanical resonators
Resonant photoelastic coupling in semiconductor nanostructures opens new
perspectives for strongly enhanced light-sound interaction in optomechanical
resonators. One potential problem, however, is the reduction of the cavity
Q-factor induced by dissipation when the resonance is approached. We show in
this letter that cavity-polariton mediation in the light-matter process
overcomes this limitation allowing for a strongly enhanced photon-phonon
coupling without significant lifetime reduction in the strongly-coupled regime.
Huge optomechanical coupling factors in the PetaHz/nm range are envisaged,
three orders of magnitude larger than the backaction produced by the mechanical
displacement of the cavity mirrors.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Dispersion and damping of multi-quantum well polaritons from resonant Brillouin scattering by folded acoustic modes
We report on confined exciton resonances of acoustic and folded acoustic
phonon light scattering in a GaAs/AlAs multi-quantum-well. Significant
variations of the line shifts and widths are observed across the resonance and
quantitatively reproduced in terms of the polariton dispersion. This high
resolution Brillouin study brings new unexpectedly detailed informations on the
polariton dynamics in confined systems
Has the chemical contribution a secondary role in SERS?
It is an established understanding that the electromagnetic contribution (the
plasmon-mediated enhancement of the laser and scattered local electromagnetic
fields) is the main actor in Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS), with the
so-called chemical (molecule-related) contribution assuming only, if any, a
supporting role. The conclusion of our comprehensive resonant study of a broad
range of nanosphere lithography based metallic substrates, with covalently
attached 4-mercaptobenzoic acid monolayers used as probe (molecules
non-resonant in solution), is that this accepted understanding needs to be
revised. We present a detailed resonant SERS study of Metal-film over
nanosphere (MFON) substrates done both by scanning the laser wavelength, and by
tuning the plasmon response through the nanosphere diameter. Far and local
field properties are characterized through measures of optical reflectivity and
SERS efficiency, respectively, and are supported by numerical simulations. We
demonstrate that the SERS efficiency depends indeed on the electromagnetic
mechanism, determined by the plasmonic response of the system, but we observe
that it is also strongly defined by a chemical resonant contribution related to
a metal-to-ligand electronic transition of the covalently bound probe molecule.
Optimum amplification occurs when the plasmon modes intersect with the
ligand-to-metal chemical resonance, contributing synergically both mechanisms
together. The same general trend is observed for other nanosphere lithography
based substrates, including sphere-segment void cavities and hexagonally
ordered triangular nanoparticles, using both Ag or Au as the plasmonic metal,
and also with a commercial substrate (Klarite). We conclude that a deep
understanding of both the electromagnetic and chemical mechanisms is necessary
to fully exploit these substrates for analytical applications
Uncoupled excitons in semiconductor microcavities detected in resonant Raman scattering
We present an outgoing resonant Raman-scattering study of a GaAs/AlGaAs based microcavity embedded in a p-i-n junction. The p-i-n junction allows the vertical electric field to be varied, permitting control of exciton-photon detuning and quenching of photoluminescence which otherwise obscures the inelastic light scattering signals. Peaks corresponding to the upper and lower polariton branches are observed in the resonant Raman cross sections, along with a third peak at the energy of uncoupled excitons. This third peak, attributed to disorder activated Raman scattering, provides clear evidence for the existence of uncoupled exciton reservoir states in microcavities in the strong-coupling regime
Cavity Optomechanics with a Laser Engineered Optical Trap
Laser engineered exciton-polariton networks could lead to dynamically
configurable integrated optical circuitry and quantum devices. Combining cavity
optomechanics with electrodynamics in laser configurable hybrid designs
constitutes a platform for the vibrational control, conversion, and transport
of signals. With this aim we investigate 3D optical traps laser-induced in
quantum-well embedded semiconductor planar microcavities. We show that the
laser generated and controlled discrete states of the traps dramatically modify
the interaction between photons and phonons confined in the resonators,
accessing through coupling of photoelastic origin
MHz an optomechanical cooperativity for mW excitation. The quenching of
Stokes processes and double-resonant enhancement of anti-Stokes ones involving
pairs of discrete optical states in the side-band resolved regime, allows the
optomechanical cooling of 180 GHz bulk acoustic waves, starting from room
temperature down to K. These results pave the way for dynamical
tailoring of optomechanical actuation in the extremely-high-frequency range
(30-300 GHz) for future network and quantum technologies.Comment: 22 pages, 14 figure
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