Direct observation of photon bound states using a single artificial atom
Natasha Tomm, Sahand Mahmoodian, Nadia O. Antoniadis, R\"udiger, Schott, Sascha R. Valentin, Andreas D. Wieck, Arne Ludwig, Alisa Javadi,, Richard J. Warburton

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the direct observation of photon bound states with photon-number-dependent time delays using a single quantum dot in cavity quantum electrodynamics, revealing key nonlinear quantum optical phenomena.
Contribution
It provides the first direct measurement of photon-number-dependent time delays, confirming the existence of photon bound states in a solid-state system.
Findings
Single photons, two- and three-photon bound states show different time delays.
Observed delays are 144.02 ps, 66.45 ps, and 45.51 ps respectively.
Results confirm photon bound states and stimulated emission effects.
Abstract
The interaction between photons and a single two-level atom constitutes a fundamental paradigm in quantum physics. The nonlinearity provided by the atom means that the light-matter interaction depends strongly on the number of photons interacting with the two-level system within its emission lifetime. This nonlinearity results in the unveiling of strongly correlated quasi-particles known as photon bound states, giving rise to key physical processes such as stimulated emission and soliton propagation. While signatures consistent with the existence of photon bound states have been measured in strongly interacting Rydberg gases, their hallmark excitation-number-dependent dispersion and propagation velocity have not yet been observed. Here, we report the direct observation of a photon-number-dependent time delay in the scattering off a single semiconductor quantum dot coupled to an optical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Semiconductor Quantum Structures and Devices · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
