Bridging Rayleigh-Jeans and Bose-Einstein condensation of a guided fluid of light with positive and negative temperatures
Lucas Zanaglia, Josselin Garnier, Sergio Rica, Robin Kaiser, Stefano, Wabnitz, Claire Michel, Valerie Doya, Antonio Picozzi

TL;DR
This paper unifies the thermodynamics of Rayleigh-Jeans and Bose-Einstein condensations of light in waveguides, introducing a frequency cut-off to derive generalized properties and exploring negative temperature regimes.
Contribution
It introduces a frequency cut-off to reconcile classical and quantum light condensation thermodynamics, extending the framework to include negative temperatures.
Findings
Derived generalized thermodynamic expressions for light condensation.
Reconciled differences between Rayleigh-Jeans and Bose-Einstein condensation behaviors.
Explored negative temperature regimes with non-critical specific heat behavior.
Abstract
We consider the free propagation geometry of a light beam (or fluid of light) in a multimode waveguide. As a result of the effective photon-photon interactions, the photon fluid thermalizes to an equilibrium state during its conservative propagation. In this configuration, Rayleigh-Jeans (RJ) thermalization and condensation of classical light waves have been recently observed experimentally in graded index multimode optical fibers characterized by a 2D parabolic trapping potential. As well-known, the properties of RJ condensation differ substantially from those of Bose-Einstein (BE) condensation: The condensate fraction decreases quadratically with the temperature for BE condensation, while it decreases linearly for RJ condensation. Furthermore, for quantum particles the heat capacity tends to zero at small temperatures, and it takes a constant value in the classical particle limit at…
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