Single-shot condensation of exciton polaritons and the hole burning effect

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Abstract

A bosonic condensate of exciton polaritons in a semiconductor microcavity is a macroscopic quantum state subject to pumping and decay. The fundamental nature of this driven-dissipative condensate is still under debate. Here, we gain an insight into spontaneous condensation by imaging long-lifetime exciton polaritons in a high-quality inorganic microcavity in a single-shot optical excitation regime, without averaging over multiple condensate realisations. We demonstrate that condensation is strongly influenced by an incoherent reservoir and that the reservoir depletion, the so-called spatial hole burning, is critical for the transition to the ground state. Condensates of photon-like polaritons exhibit strong shot-to-shot fluctuations and density filamentation due to the effective self-focusing associated with the reservoir depletion. In contrast, condensates of exciton-like polaritons display smoother spatial density distributions and are second-order coherent. Our observations show that the single-shot measurements offer a unique opportunity to study fundamental properties of non-equilibrium condensation in the presence of a reservoir.

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Estrecho, E., Gao, T., Bobrovska, N., Fraser, M. D., Steger, M., Pfeiffer, L., … Ostrovskaya, E. A. (2018). Single-shot condensation of exciton polaritons and the hole burning effect. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05349-4

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