Radiative Auger Process in the Single-Photon Limit
Matthias C. L\"obl, Clemens Spinnler, Alisa Javadi, Liang Zhai, Giang, N. Nguyen, Julian Ritzmann, Leonardo Midolo, Peter Lodahl, Andreas D. Wieck,, Arne Ludwig, Richard J. Warburton

TL;DR
This paper reports the first observation of the radiative Auger process in single quantum dots, demonstrating its use as a precise probe of single-electron energy levels and dynamics in semiconductor nanostructures.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of radiative Auger in quantum dots and introduces quantum optics techniques to study single-electron properties and relaxation processes.
Findings
Radiative Auger observed in single quantum dots.
Energy separations measure single-electron level splittings.
Quantum optics techniques reveal electron relaxation and tunneling.
Abstract
In a multi-electron atom, an excited electron can decay by emitting a photon. Typically, the leftover electrons are in their ground state. In a radiative Auger process, the leftover electrons are in an excited state and a redshifted photon is created. In a semiconductor quantum dot, radiative Auger is predicted for charged excitons. Here we report the observation of radiative Auger on trions in single quantum dots. For a trion, a photon is created on electron-hole recombination, leaving behind a single electron. The radiative Auger process promotes this additional (Auger) electron to a higher shell of the quantum dot. We show that the radiative Auger effect is a powerful probe of this single electron: the energy separations between the resonance fluorescence and the radiative Auger emission directly measure the single-particle splittings of the electronic states in the quantum dot with…
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