We investigate the optical response of quantum dot molecules coherently
driven by polarized laser light. Our description includes the splitting in
excitonic levels caused by isotropic and anisotropic exchange interactions. We
consider interdot transitions mediated by hole tunneling between states with
the same total angular momentum and between bright and dark exciton states, as
allowed by spin-flip hopping between the dots in the molecule. Using realistic
experimental parameters we demonstrate that the excitonic states coupled by
tunneling exhibit a rich and controllable optical response. We show that
through the appropriate control of an external electric field and light
polarization, the tunneling coupling establishes an efficient destructive
quantum interference path that creates a transparency window in the absorption
spectra, whenever states of appropriate symmetry are mixed by the carrier
tunneling. We explore the relevant parameter space that allows probing this
phenomenon in experiments. Controlled variation of applied field and laser
detuning would allow the optical characterization of spin-preserving and
spin-flip hopping amplitudes in such systems, by measuring the width of the
tunneling-induced transparency windows.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure