The birth of a quasiparticle in Si observed in time-frequency space
Muneaki Hase, Masahiro Kitajima, Anca Monia Constantinescu, and Hrvoje, Petek

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates real-time observation of quasiparticle formation in silicon using ultrafast laser pulses, revealing how a phonon becomes dressed by electron-hole pairs within femtoseconds.
Contribution
It provides the first direct time-frequency space observation of quasiparticle formation in silicon with ultrafast laser techniques.
Findings
Observation of coherent phonon excitation in silicon.
Visualization of phonon dressing by electron-hole pairs.
Time-resolved evidence of quasiparticle emergence.
Abstract
The concept of quasiparticles in solid-state physics is an extremely powerful way to describe complex many-body phenomena in terms of single particle excitations. Introducing a simple particle such as electron, e, hole, h, or a phonon, p, deforms a many-body system through interaction with other particles. We say the added particle is dressed or renormalized by a self-energy cloud that describes the response of the many-body system forming a new entity, the quasiparticle. With ultrafast laser techniques we can impulsively generate bare particles and observe their dressing by the many-body interactions, that is quasiparticle formation, on the time and energy scales governed by the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. Here we present the coherent response of Si to excitation with a 10 femtosecond (10-14 s) laser pulse. The optical pulse interacts with the sample via the complex second-order…
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