1,578 research outputs found
Direct measurement of the hole-nuclear spin interaction in single quantum dots
We use photoluminescence spectroscopy of ''bright'' and ''dark'' exciton
states in single InP/GaInP quantum dots to measure hyperfine interaction of the
valence band hole with nuclear spins polarized along the sample growth axis.
The ratio of the hyperfine constants for the hole (C) and electron (A) is found
to be C/A~-0.11. In InP dots the contribution of spin 1/2 phosphorus nuclei to
the hole-nuclear interaction is weak, which enables us to determine
experimentally the value of C for spin 9/2 indium nuclei as C_In~-5 micro-eV.
This high value of C is in good agreement with recent theoretical predictions
and suggests that the hole-nuclear spin interaction has to be taken into
account when considering spin qubits based on holes.Comment: to be submitted to Phys Rev Let
Voltage controlled nuclear polarization switching in a single InGaAs quantum dot
Sharp threshold-like transitions between two stable nuclear spin
polarizations are observed in optically pumped individual InGaAs self-assembled
quantum dots embedded in a Schottky diode when the bias applied to the diode is
tuned. The abrupt transitions lead to the switching of the Overhauser field in
the dot by up to 3 Tesla. The bias-dependent photoluminescence measurements
reveal the importance of the electron-tunneling-assisted nuclear spin pumping.
We also find evidence for the resonant LO-phonon-mediated electron
co-tunneling, the effect controlled by the applied bias and leading to the
reduction of the nuclear spin pumping rate.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Phys Rev
Phonon-Induced Rabi-Frequency Renormalization of Optically Driven Single InGaAs/GaAs Quantum Dots
The authors thank the EPSRC (U.K.) EP/G001642, and the QIPIRC U.K. for financial support. A. N. is supported by the EPSRC and B.W. L. by the Royal Society.We study optically driven Rabi rotations of a quantum dot exciton transition between 5 and 50 K, and for pulse areas of up to 14 pi. In a high driving field regime, the decay of the Rabi rotations is nonmonotonic, and the period decreases with pulse area and increases with temperature. By comparing the experiments to a weak-coupling model of the exciton-phonon interaction, we demonstrate that the observed renormalization of the Rabi frequency is induced by fluctuations in the bath of longitudinal acoustic phonons, an effect that is a phonon analogy of the Lamb shift.Peer reviewe
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
Fast optical preparation, control, and readout of a single quantum dot spin
We propose and demonstrate the sequential initialization, optical control, and readout of a single spin trapped in a semiconductor quantum dot. Hole spin preparation is achieved through ionization of a resonantly excited electron-hole pair. Optical control is observed as a coherent Rabi rotation between the hole and charged-exciton states, which is conditional on the initial hole spin state. The spin-selective creation of the charged exciton provides a photocurrent readout of the hole spin state. © 2008 The American Physical Society
Optically tunable nuclear magnetic resonance in a single quantum dot
We report optically detected nuclear magnetic resonance (ODNMR) measurements on small ensembles of nuclear spins in single GaAs quantum dots. Using ODNMR we make direct measurements of the inhomogeneous Knight field from a photoexcited electron which acts on the nuclei in the dot. The resulting shifts of the NMR peak can be optically controlled by varying the electron occupancy and its spin orientation, and lead to strongly asymmetric line shapes at high optical excitation. The all-optical control of the NMR line shape will enable position-selective control of small groups of nuclear spins inside a dot
Angle-resonant stimulated polariton amplifier
We experimentally demonstrate resonant coupling between photons and excitons in microcavities which can efficiently generate enormous single-pass optical gains approaching 100. This new parametric phenomenon appears as a sharp angular resonance of the incoming pump beam, at which the moving excitonic polaritons undergo very large changes in momentum. Ultrafast stimulated scattering is clearly identified from the exponential dependence on pump intensity. This device utilizes boson amplification
induced by stimulated energy relaxation
Overhauser effect in individual InP/GaInP dots
Sizable nuclear spin polarization is pumped in individual InP/GaInP dots in a
wide range of external magnetic fields B_ext=0-5T by circularly polarized
optical excitation. We observe nuclear polarization of up to ~40% at Bext=1.5T
and corresponding to an Overhauser field of ~1.2T. We find a strong feedback of
the nuclear spin on the spin pumping efficiency. This feedback, produced by the
Overhauser field, leads to nuclear spin bi-stability at low magnetic fields of
Bext=0.5-1.5T. We find that the exciton Zeeman energy increases markedly, when
the Overhauser field cancels the external field. This counter-intuitive result
is shown to arise from the opposite contribution of the electron and hole
Zeeman splittings to the total exciton Zeeman energy
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