Ultrafast modulation of vibrational polaritons for controlling the quantum field statistics at mid-infrared frequencies
Johan F. Triana, Felipe Herrera

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates ultrafast modulation of vibrational polaritons in mid-infrared cavities, enabling control over quantum field statistics and generation of non-classical light at room temperature.
Contribution
It introduces a method to reversibly manipulate cavity quantum states via femtosecond UV pulse modulation, advancing mid-infrared quantum photonics.
Findings
Sub-picosecond control of cavity field statistics achieved.
Generation of sub-Poissonian and quadrature squeezed light demonstrated.
Design principles for mid-infrared quantum light sources proposed.
Abstract
Controlling the quantum field statistics of confined light is a long-standing goal in integrated photonics. We show that by coupling molecular vibrations with a confined mid-infrared cavity vacuum, the photocount and quadrature field statistics of the cavity field can be reversibly manipulated over sub-picosecond timescales. The mechanism involves changing the cavity resonance frequency through a modulation of the dielectric response of the cavity materials using femtosecond UV pulses. For a single anharmonic molecular vibration in an infrared cavity under ultrastrong coupling conditions, the pulsed modulation of the cavity frequency can adiabatically produce mid-infrared light that is simultaneously sub-Poissonian and quadrature squeezed, depending on the dipolar behavior of the vibrational mode. For a vibration-cavity system in strong coupling, non-adiabatic polariton excitations can…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsStrong Light-Matter Interactions · Plasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research · Quantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect
