60 research outputs found
Composite boson signature in the interference pattern of atomic dimer condensates
We predict the existence of high frequency modes in the interference pattern
of two condensates made of fermionic-atom dimers. These modes, which result
from fermion exchanges between condensates, constitute a striking signature of
the dimer composite nature. From the 2-coboson spatial correlation function,
that we derive analytically, and the Shiva diagrams that visualize many-body
effects specific to composite bosons, we identify the physical origin of these
high frequency modes and determine the conditions to see them experimentally by
using bound fermionic-atom pairs trapped on optical lattice sites. The dimer
granularity which appears in these modes comes from Pauli blocking that
prevents two dimers to be located at the same lattice site.Comment: 10+7 pp, 3 figures. v2: version accepted for publication in New J.
Phy
Way to observe the implausible "trion-polariton"
Using the composite boson (coboson) many-body formalism, we determine under
which conditions "trion-polariton" can exist. Dipolar attraction can bind an
exciton and an electron into a trion having an energy well separated from the
exciton energy. Yet, the existence of long-lived "trion-polariton" is a priori
implausible not only because the photon-trion coupling, which scales as the
inverse of the sample volume, is vanishingly small, but mostly because this
coupling is intrinsically "weak". Here, we show that a moderately dense Fermi
sea renders its observation possible: on the pro side, the Fermi sea overcomes
the weak coupling by pinning the photon to its momentum through Pauli blocking,
it also overcomes the dramatically poor photon-trion coupling by providing a
volume-linear trion subspace to which the photon is coherently coupled. On the
con side, the Fermi sea broadens the photon-trion resonance due to the
fermionic nature of trions and electrons, it also weakens the trion binding by
blocking electronic states relevant for trion formation. As a result, the
proper way to observe this novel polariton is to use doped semiconductor having
long-lived electronic states, highly-bound trion and Fermi energy as large as a
fraction of the trion binding energy.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Electronic structure and absorption spectrum of biexciton obtained by using exciton basis
We approach the biexciton Schr\"{o}dinger equation not through the
free-carrier basis as usually done, but through the free-exciton basis,
exciton-exciton interactions being treated according to the recently developed
composite boson many-body formalism which allows an exact handling of carrier
exchange between excitons, as induced by the Pauli exclusion principle. We
numerically solve the resulting biexciton Schr\"{o}dinger equation with the
exciton levels restricted to the ground state and we derive the biexciton
ground state as well as the bound and unbound excited states as a function of
hole-to-electron mass ratio. The biexciton ground-state energy we find, agrees
reasonably well with variational results. Next, we use the obtained biexciton
wave functions to calculate optical absorption in the presence of a dilute
exciton gas in quantum well. We find a small asymmetric peak with a
characteristic low-energy tail, identified with the biexciton ground state, and
a set of large peaks associated with biexciton unbound states, i.e.,
exciton-exciton scattering states.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figure
Cross-over from trion-hole to exciton-polaron in n-doped semiconductor quantum wells
We present a theoretical study of photo-absorption in n-doped two-dimensional
(2D) and quasi-2D semiconductors that takes into account the interaction of the
photocreated exciton with Fermi-sea (FS) electrons through (i) Pauli blocking,
(ii) Coulomb screening, and (iii) excitation of FS electron-hole pairs---that
we here restrict to one. The system we tackle is thus made of one exciton plus
zero or one FS electron-hole pair. At low doping, the system ground state is
predominantly made of a "trion-hole"---a trion (two opposite-spin electrons
plus a valence hole) weakly bound to a FS hole---with a small exciton
component. As the trion is poorly coupled to photon, the intensity of the
lowest absorption peak is weak; it increases with doping, thanks to the growing
exciton component, due to a larger coupling between 2-particle and 4-particle
states. Under a further doping increase, the trion-hole complex is less bound
because of Pauli blocking by FS electrons, and its energy increases. The lower
peak then becomes predominantly due to an exciton dressed by FS electron-hole
pairs, that is, an exciton-polaron. As a result, the absorption spectra of
-doped semiconductor quantum wells show two prominent peaks, the nature of
the lowest peak turning from trion-hole to exciton-polaron under a doping
increase. Our work also nails down the physical mechanism behind the increase
with doping of the energy separation between the trion-hole peak and the
exciton-polaron peak, even before the anti-crossing, as experimentally
observed.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figure
Exciton ground-state energy with full hole warping structure
Most semiconductors, in particular III-V compounds, have a complex valence
band structure near the band edge, due to degeneracy at the zone center. One
peculiar feature is the warping of the electronic dispersion relations, which
are not isotropic even in the vicinity of the band edge. When the exciton, all
important for the semiconductor optical properties, is considered, this problem
is usually handled by using some kind of angular averaging procedure, that
would restore the isotropy of the hole effective dispersion relations. In the
present paper, we consider the problem of the exciton ground-state energy for
semiconductors with zinc-blende crystal structure, and we solve it exactly by a
numerical treatment, taking fully into account the warping of the valence band.
In the resulting four-dimensional problem, we first show exactly that the
exciton ground state is fourfold degenerate. We then explore the ground-state
energy across the full range of allowed Luttinger parameters. We find that the
correction due to warping may in principle be quite large. However, for the
semiconductors with available data for the band structure we have considered,
the correction turns out to be in the range.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
Correlation Energy for Elementary Bosons: Physics of the Singularity
We propose a compact perturbative approach that reveals the physical origin
of the singularity occurring in the density dependence of correlation energy:
like fermions, elementary bosons have a singular correlation energy which comes
from the accumulation, through Feynman "bubble" diagrams, of the same non-zero
momentum transfer excitations from the free particle ground state, that is, the
Fermi sea for fermions and the Bose-Einstein condensate for bosons. This
understanding paves the way toward deriving the correlation energy of composite
bosons like atomic dimers and semiconductor excitons, by suggesting Shiva
diagrams that have similarity with Feynman "bubble" diagrams, the previous
elementary boson approaches, which hide this physics, being difficult to do so.Comment: 16 pages, 22 figure
A fresh view on Frenkel excitons: Electron-hole pair exchange and many-body formalism
We here present a fresh approach to Frenkel excitons in cubic semiconductor
crystals, with a special focus on the spin and spatial degeneracies of the
electronic states. This approach uses a second quantization formulation of the
problem in terms of creation operators for electronic states on all lattice
sites -- their creation operators being true fermion operators in the
tight-binding limit valid for semiconductors hosting Frenkel excitons. This
operator formalism avoids using cumbersome ( x ) Slater
determinants -- 2 for spin, 3 for spatial degeneracy and for the number
of lattice sites -- to represent state wave functions out of which the Frenkel
exciton eigenstates are derived. A deep understanding of the tricky Coulomb
physics that takes place in the Frenkel exciton problem, is a prerequisite for
possibly diagonalizing this very large matrix analytically. This is done in
three steps: (i) the first diagonalization, with respect to lattice sites,
follows from transforming excitations on the lattice sites
into exciton waves , by using appropriate
phase prefactors; (ii) the second diagonalization, with respect to spin,
follows from the introduction of spin-singlet and spin-triplet electron-hole
pair states, through the commonly missed sign change when transforming
electron-absence operators into hole operators; (iii) the third
diagonalization, with respect to threefold spatial degeneracy, leads to the
splitting of the exciton level into one longitudinal and two transverse modes,
that result from the singular interlevel Coulomb scattering in the small
limit.Comment: 80 pages, 21 figure
- …