Quantum fluids of light
Iacopo Carusotto, Cristiano Ciuti

TL;DR
This review discusses recent advances in understanding and controlling quantum fluids of light, highlighting experimental observations of superfluidity, topological excitations, and potential for strongly correlated photon states across various systems.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the experimental and theoretical progress in quantum fluids of light, emphasizing semiconductor microcavities and exploring future directions for strongly correlated photon gases.
Findings
Observation of superfluid flow around defects
Detection of Mach-Cherenkov cones in supersonic flows
Formation of quantized vortices and dark solitons
Abstract
This article reviews recent theoretical and experimental advances in the fundamental understanding and active control of quantum fluids of light in nonlinear optical systems. In presence of effective photon-photon interactions induced by the optical nonlinearity of the medium, a many-photon system can behave collectively as a quantum fluid with a number of novel features stemming from its intrinsically non-equilibrium nature. We present a rich variety of photon hydrodynamical effects that have been recently observed, from the superfluid flow around a defect at low speeds, to the appearance of a Mach-Cherenkov cone in a supersonic flow, to the hydrodynamic formation of topological excitations such as quantized vortices and dark solitons at the surface of large impenetrable obstacles. While our review is mostly focused on a class of semiconductor systems that have been extensively studied…
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