Dicke Superradiance in Solids
Kankan Cong, Qi Zhang, Yongrui Wang, G. Timothy Noe II, Alexey, Belyanin, Junichiro Kono

TL;DR
This paper reviews the phenomenon of superradiance in solid-state systems, highlighting recent experimental and theoretical advances, especially in quantum wells under strong magnetic fields, demonstrating its significant role in nonequilibrium dynamics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of superradiance in solids, including recent studies on quantum wells in magnetic fields, showing its dominance in electron dynamics and light emission.
Findings
Superradiance observed in molecular centers, aggregates, and quantum dots.
Cooperative effects can dominate nonequilibrium electron dynamics in solids.
Quantum wells in magnetic fields exhibit pronounced superradiant behavior.
Abstract
Recent advances in optical studies of condensed matter have led to the emergence of phenomena that have conventionally been studied in the realm of quantum optics. These studies have not only deepened our understanding of light-matter interactions but also introduced aspects of many-body correlations inherent in optical processes in condensed matter systems. This article is concerned with superradiance (SR), a profound quantum optical process predicted by Dicke in 1954. The basic concept of SR applies to a general -body system where constituent oscillating dipoles couple together through interaction with a common light field and accelerate the radiative decay of the system. In the most fascinating manifestation of SR, known as superfluorescence (SF), an incoherently prepared system of inverted atoms spontaneously develops macroscopic coherence from vacuum fluctuations and…
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