4.8 Article

Sculpting oscillators with light within a nonlinear quantum fluid

Journal

NATURE PHYSICS
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages 190-194

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/NPHYS2182

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Greek GSRT
  2. FPI of the Spanish MICINN
  3. [EPSRC EP/G060649/1]
  4. [EU CLERMONT4 235114]
  5. [EU INDEX 289968]
  6. [Spanish MEC (MAT2008-01555)]
  7. EPSRC [EP/D032407/1, EP/G060649/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  8. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/G060649/1, EP/D032407/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Seeing macroscopic quantum states directly remains an elusive goal. Particles with boson symmetry can condense into 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 visualize 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 tunable THz 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.

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