42 research outputs found
Lasing threshold doubling at the crossover from strong to weak coupling regime in GaAs microcavity
In a polariton, laser coherent monochromatic light is produced by a low-energy state of the system at the bottom of a polariton ‘trap’, where a condensate of polaritons is formed, requiring no conventional population inversion. Following the recent realization of polariton light-emitting diodes (LEDs) based on GaAs microcavities (MCs) operating up to room temperature, efforts have been directed towards the demonstration of an electrically injected polariton laser. However, until now, low-threshold polariton lasing in GaAs MCs under optical pumping has been reported only at low temperatures. Here, we investigate the temperature dependence of lasing threshold across the border of the strong-to-weak coupling regime transition in high-finesse GaAs MCs under non-resonant optical pumping. Remarkably, we find that although lasing in the strong coupling regime is lost when the temperature is raised from 25 to 70 K, the threshold only doubles, in stark contrast with the expected difference of two orders of magnitude. Our results can be explained by considering temperatureinduced thermalization of carriers to high wavevector states, increasing the reservoir’s overall carrier lifetime, resulting in an order of magnitude higher steady-state carrier density at 70 K under similar pumping conditions
The Non-linear Optical Spin Hall Effect and Long-Range Spin Transport in Polariton Lasers
We report on the experimental observation of the non-linear analogue of the
optical spin Hall effect under highly non-resonant circularly polarized
excitation of an exciton polariton condensate in a GaAs/AlGaAs microcavity.
Initially circularly polarized polariton condensates propagate over macroscopic
distances while the collective condensate spins coherently precess around an
effective magnetic field in the sample plane performing up to four complete
revolutions
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
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
Geometrically locked vortex lattices in semiconductor quantum fluids
Macroscopic quantum states can be easily created and manipulated within semiconductor microcavity chips using exciton-photon quasiparticles called polaritons. Besides being a new platform for technology, polaritons have proven to be ideal systems to study out-of-equilibrium condensates. Here we harness the photonic component of such a semiconductor quantum fluid to measure its coherent wavefunction on macroscopic scales. Polaritons originating from separated and independent incoherently pumped spots are shown to phase-lock only in high-quality microcavities, producing up to 100 vortices and antivortices that extend over tens of microns across the sample and remain locked for many minutes. The resultant regular vortex lattices are highly sensitive to the optically imposed geometry, with modulational instabilities present only in square and not triangular lattices. Such systems describe the optical equivalents to one- and two-dimensional spin systems with (anti)-ferromagnetic interactions controlled by their symmetry, which can be reconfigured on the fly, paving the way to widespread applications in the control of quantum fluidic circuits
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