22 research outputs found
Spontaneous spin bifurcations and ferromagnetic phase transitions in a spinor exciton-polariton condensate
We observe a spontaneous parity breaking bifurcation to a ferromagnetic state
in a spatially trapped exciton-polariton condensate. At a critical bifurcation
density under nonresonant excitation, the whole condensate spontaneously
magnetizes and randomly adopts one of two elliptically polarized (up to 95%
circularly-polarized) states with opposite handedness of polarization. The
magnetized condensate remains stable for many seconds at 5 K, but at higher
temperatures it can flip from one magnetic orientation to another. We optically
address these states and demonstrate the inversion of the magnetic state by
resonantly injecting 100-fold weaker pulses of opposite spin. Theoretically,
these phenomena can be well described as spontaneous symmetry breaking of the
spin degree of freedom induced by different loss rates of the linear
polarizations.This work was supported by Grants EPSRC No. EP/G060649/1, EU No. CLERMONT4 235114, EU No. INDEX 289968, Spanish MEC (MAT2008-01555), Greek GSRT ARISTEIA Apollo program and Fundación La Caixa, and Mexican CONACYT No. 251808. FP acknowledges financial support through an EPSRC doctoral prize fellowship at the University of Cambridge and a Schrödinger fellowship at the University of Oxford.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from the American Physical Society via http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.5.03100
Spin Order and Phase Transitions in Chains of Polariton Condensates
We demonstrate that multiply coupled spinor polariton condensates can be optically tuned through a sequence of spin-ordered phases by changing the coupling strength between nearest neighbors. For closed four-condensate chains these phases span from ferromagnetic (FM) to antiferromagnetic (AFM), separated by an unexpected crossover phase. This crossover phase is composed of alternating FM-AFM bonds. For larger eight-condensate chains, we show the critical role of spatial inhomogeneities and demonstrate a scheme to overcome them and prepare any desired spin state. Our observations thus demonstrate a fully controllable nonequilibrium spin lattice.We acknowledge Grants No. EPSRC EP/L027151/1, No. EU INDEX 289968, No. ERC “POLAFLOW” Starting Grant, ERC LINASS 320503, Spanish MEC (MAT2008- 01555), Mexican CONACYT 251808, Leverhulme Trust Grant No. VP1-2013-011 and Fundación La Caixa. H. S. and I. S. acknowledge support by the Research Fund of the University of Iceland, The Icelandic Research Fund, Grant No. 163082-051. T. L. was supported by the MOE AcRF Tier 1 Grant No. 2016-T1-001-084. P. S. acknowledges financial support from the Stavros Niarchos Foundation, “ARCHERS” project
Cost-effectiveness of an insertable cardiac monitor in a high-risk population in the UK
Objective To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of insertable cardiac monitors (ICMs) compared with standard of care (SoC) for detecting atrial fibrillation (AF) in patients at high risk of stroke (CHADS 2 >2), using a UK National Health Service (NHS) perspective. Methods Using patient characteristics and clinical data from the REVEAL AF trial, a Markov model assessed the cost-effectiveness of detecting AF with an ICM compared with SoC. Costs and benefits were extrapolated across modelled patient lifetime. Ischaemic and haemorrhagic strokes, intracranial and extracranial haemorrhages and minor bleeds were modelled. Diagnostic and device costs were included, plus costs of treating stroke and bleeding events and costs of oral anticoagulants (OACs). Costs and health outcomes, measured as quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), were discounted at 3.5% per annum. One-way deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses (PSA) were undertaken. Results The total per-patient cost for ICM was £13 360 versus £11 936 for SoC (namely, annual 24 hours Holter monitoring). ICMs generated a total of 6.50 QALYs versus 6.30 for SoC. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was £7140/QALY gained, below the £20 000/QALY acceptability threshold. ICMs were cost-effective in 77.4% of PSA simulations. The number of ICMs needed to prevent one stroke was 21 and to cause a major bleed was 37. ICERs were sensitive to assumed proportions of patients initiating or discontinuing OAC after AF diagnosis, type of OAC used and how intense the traditional monitoring was assumed to be under SoC. Conclusions The use of ICMs to identify AF in a high-risk population is cost-effective for the UK NHS
Tuning the Energy of a Polariton Condensate via Bias-Controlled Rabi Splitting
We introduce an electrically driven scheme to tune the polariton condensate energy in a high-finesse GaAs microcavity. In contrast to the conventional redshift observed in semiconductor quantum wells (QWs) under applied electrical bias arising from the quantum-confined Stark effect (QCSE), we report here the blueshift of a polariton condensate caused by controlled reduction of the Rabi splitting due to tunneling-induced charge buildup and fractional bleaching of QWs. At larger electrical bias, the QCSE becomes dominant, leading to a redshift in the linear regime, while in the nonlinear regime to the eventual quenching of the condensate emission. This ability to tune the polariton condensate energy brings within reach the realization of voltage-controlled polariton condensate devices and variable-wavelength sources of coherent light
Sculpting oscillators with light within a nonlinear quantum fluid
Seeing macroscopic quantum states directly remains an elusive goal. Particles
with boson symmetry can condense into such quantum fluids producing rich
physical phenomena as well as proven potential for interferometric devices
[1-10]. However direct imaging of such quantum states is only fleetingly
possible in high-vacuum ultracold atomic condensates, and not in
superconductors. Recent condensation of solid state polariton quasiparticles,
built from mixing semiconductor excitons with microcavity photons, offers
monolithic devices capable of supporting room temperature quantum states
[11-14] that exhibit superfluid behaviour [15,16]. Here we use microcavities on
a semiconductor chip supporting two-dimensional polariton condensates to
directly visualise the formation of a spontaneously oscillating quantum fluid.
This system is created on the fly by injecting polaritons at two or more
spatially-separated pump spots. Although oscillating at tuneable THz-scale
frequencies, a simple optical microscope can be used to directly image their
stable archetypal quantum oscillator wavefunctions in real space. The
self-repulsion of polaritons provides a solid state quasiparticle that is so
nonlinear as to modify its own potential. Interference in time and space
reveals the condensate wavepackets arise from non-equilibrium solitons. Control
of such polariton condensate wavepackets demonstrates great potential for
integrated semiconductor-based condensate devices.Comment: accepted in Nature Physic
Observation of bright polariton solitons in a semiconductor microcavity
Microcavity polaritons are composite half-light half-matter quasi-particles,
which have recently been demonstrated to exhibit rich physical properties, such
as non-equilibrium Bose-Einstein condensation, parametric scattering and
superfluidity. At the same time, polaritons have some important advantages over
photons for information processing applications, since their excitonic
component leads to weaker diffraction and stronger inter-particle interactions,
implying, respectively, tighter localization and lower powers for nonlinear
functionality. Here we present the first experimental observations of bright
polariton solitons in a strongly coupled semiconductor microcavity. The
polariton solitons are shown to be non-diffracting high density wavepackets,
that are strongly localised in real space with a corresponding broad spectrum
in momentum space. Unlike solitons known in other matter-wave systems such as
Bose condensed ultracold atomic gases, they are non-equilibrium and rely on a
balance between losses and external pumping. Microcavity polariton solitons are
excited on picosecond timescales, and thus have significant benefits for
ultrafast switching and transfer of information over their light only
counterparts, semiconductor cavity lasers (VCSELs), which have only nanosecond
response time
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Strain-assisted optomechanical coupling of polariton condensate spin to a micromechanical resonator
We report spin and intensity coupling of an exciton-polariton condensate to the mechanical vibrations of a circular membrane microcavity. We optically drive the microcavity resonator at the lowest mechanical resonance frequency while creating an optically-trapped spin-polarized polariton condensate in different locations on the microcavity, and observe spin and intensity oscillations of the condensate at the vibration frequency of the resonator. Spin oscillations are induced by vibrational strain driving, whilst the modulation of the optical trap due to the displacement of the membrane causes intensity oscillations in the condensate emission. Our results demonstrate spin-phonon coupling in a macroscopically coherent condensate
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Stochastic spin flips in polariton condensates: Nonlinear tuning from GHz to sub-Hz
The stability of spin of macroscopic quantum states to intrinsic noise is studied for non-resonantly pumped optically-trapped polariton condensates. We demonstrate flipping between the two spinpolarised
states with >10⁴ slow-down of the flip rate by tuning the optical pump power. Individual spin flips faster than 50 picosecond are time resolved using single-shot streak camera imaging. We reproduce our results within a mean-field model accounting for cross-spin scattering between excitons and polaritons, yielding a ratio of cross- to co-spin scattering of ~0.6, in contrast with previous literature suggestions.ERC LINASS 320503. Leverhulme Trust Grant No. VP1-2013-011. Bilateral Greece-Russia “Polisimulator” project co-financed by Greece and the EU Regional Development Fund. Stavros Niarchos Foundation, “ARCHERS” project. Horizon 2020 programme (No. FETPROACT-2016 732894-HOT). CONACYT (Mexico) grant No. 251808. Institute for Basic Science in Korea (IBS-R024-D1
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Erratum: Stochastic spin flips in polariton condensates: Nonlinear tuning from ghz to sub-hz (New Journal of Physics (2018) 20 (075008) DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/aad377)
The stability of spin of macroscopic quantum states to intrinsic noise is studied for non-resonantly pumped optically-trapped polariton condensates. We demonstrate flipping between the two spinpolarised
states with >10⁴ slow-down of the flip rate by tuning the optical pump power. Individual spin flips faster than 50 picosecond are time resolved using single-shot streak camera imaging. We reproduce our results within a mean-field model accounting for cross-spin scattering between excitons and polaritons, yielding a ratio of cross- to co-spin scattering of ~0.6, in contrast with previous literature suggestions.ERC LINASS 320503. Leverhulme Trust Grant No. VP1-2013-011. Bilateral Greece-Russia “Polisimulator” project co-financed by Greece and the EU Regional Development Fund. Stavros Niarchos Foundation, “ARCHERS” project. Horizon 2020 programme (No. FETPROACT-2016 732894-HOT). CONACYT (Mexico) grant No. 251808. Institute for Basic Science in Korea (IBS-R024-D1