Real-space collapse of a polariton condensate
L. Dominici, M. Petrov, M. Matuszewski, D. Ballarini, M. De Giorgi, D., Colas, E. Cancellieri, B. Silva Fern\'andez, A. Bramati, G. Gigli, A., Kavokin, F. Laussy, D. Sanvitto

TL;DR
This paper reports the observation of a real-space collapse of a polariton condensate into a localized peak, suggesting a self-trapping mechanism possibly involving local lattice heating, which challenges conventional understanding of polariton interactions.
Contribution
The study provides the first ultrafast imaging evidence of polariton condensate collapse and proposes a novel self-trapping mechanism involving local heating and polaron formation.
Findings
Observation of condensate collapsing into a localized peak
Ultrafast imaging tracking real and reciprocal space dynamics
Proposed self-trapping via local lattice heating and polaron formation
Abstract
Polaritons in microcavities are versatile quasi-2D bosonic particles with a high degree of coherence and strong nonlinearities, thanks to their hybrid light-matter character. In their condensed form, they display striking quantum hydrodynamic features analogous to atomic Bose-Einstein condensates, such as long-range order coherence, superfluidity and quantized vorticity. Their variegated dispersive and dissipative properties, however, set significant differences from their atomic counterpart. In this work, we report the unique phenomenology that is observed when a pulse of light impacts the polariton vacuum: the condensate that is instantaneously formed does not splash in real space but instead coheres into an enigmatic structure, featuring concentric rings and, most notably, a sharp and bright peak at the center. Using a state-of-the-art ultrafast imaging with 50 fs time steps, we are…
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