Transition to a Bose-Einstein condensate of excitons at sub-Kelvin temperatures
Kosuke Yoshioka, Eunmi Chae, Makoto Kuwata-Gonokami

TL;DR
This paper reports the first observation of Bose-Einstein condensation of paraexcitons in Cu2O at sub-Kelvin temperatures, demonstrating a new pathway to achieve exciton BEC despite high inelastic collision rates.
Contribution
It shows that exciton BEC can be realized by cooling paraexcitons to sub-Kelvin temperatures, overcoming previous limitations posed by collisional losses.
Findings
Observation of threshold-like emission spectra indicating BEC formation
Detection of bosonic stimulated scattering into the condensate
Condensate fraction limited to about 1% due to collisional loss
Abstract
Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) is a quantum mechanical phenomenon directly linked to the quantum statistics of bosons. While cold atomic gases provide a new arena for exploring the nature of BEC, a long-term quest to confirm BEC of excitons, quasi-Bose particles formed as a bound state of an electron-hole pair, has been underway since its theoretical prediction in the 1960s. Ensembles of electrons and holes are complex quantum systems with strong Coulomb correlations; thus, it is non-trivial whether nature chooses a form of exciton BEC. Various systems have been examined in bulk and two-dimensional semiconductors and also exciton-photon hybrid systems. Among them, the 1s paraexciton state in a single crystal of Cu2O has been a prime candidate for realizing three-dimensional BEC. The large binding energy and long lifetime enable preparation of cold excitons in thermal equilibrium with…
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