Polaritons are Not Weakly Interacting: Direct Measurement of the Polariton-Polariton Interaction Strength
Yongbao Sun, Yoseob Yoon, Mark Steger, Gangqiang Liu, Loren N., Pfeiffer, Ken West, David W. Snoke, and Keith A. Nelson

TL;DR
This paper presents a direct measurement of the polariton-polariton interaction strength in a high-Q microcavity, revealing it to be much stronger than previously estimated and demonstrating many-body effects in polariton condensates.
Contribution
The study provides the first direct experimental measurement of polariton-polariton interactions, showing they are significantly stronger than prior theoretical predictions.
Findings
Interaction strength is about 100 times larger than previous estimates.
Polariton interactions exhibit a sharp transition indicating many-body effects.
Polaritons are confirmed to be in the strongly-interacting regime.
Abstract
Exciton-polaritons in a microcavity are composite two-dimensional bosonic quasiparticles, arising from the strong coupling between confined light modes in a resonant planar optical cavity and excitonic transitions, typically using excitons in semiconductor quantum wells (QWs) placed at the antinodes of the same cavity. Quantum phenomena such as Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC), quantized vortices, and macroscopic quantum states have been reported at temperatures from tens of Kelvin up to room temperatures, and polaritonic devices such as spin switches \cite{Amo2010} and optical transistors have also been reported. Many of these effects of exciton-polaritons depend crucially on the polariton-polariton interaction strength. Despite the importance of this parameter, it has been difficult to make an accurate experimental measurement, mostly because of the difficulty of determining the…
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