Radiative corrections to the excitonic molecule state in GaAs microcavities
A. L. Ivanov, P. Borri, W. Langbein, and U. Woggon

TL;DR
This study investigates the significant radiative corrections to excitonic molecules in GaAs microcavities, combining theoretical and experimental approaches to reveal their impact on optical properties and decay channels.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of radiative corrections to excitonic molecules in GaAs microcavities, including experimental measurements and the bipolariton model explanation.
Findings
Radiative corrections are 10-30% of the molecule binding energy.
The radiative width of excitonic molecules in microcavities is about 0.2-0.3 meV.
Two critical points in radiative correction dependence on cavity detuning are identified.
Abstract
The optical properties of excitonic molecules (XXs) in GaAs-based quantum well microcavities (MCs) are studied, both theoretically and experimentally. We show that the radiative corrections to the XX state, the Lamb shift and radiative width , are large, about of the molecule binding energy , and definitely cannot be neglected. The optics of excitonic molecules is dominated by the in-plane resonant dissociation of the molecules into outgoing 1-mode and 0-mode cavity polaritons. The later decay channel, ``excitonic molecule 0-mode polariton + 0-mode polariton'', deals with the short-wavelength MC polaritons invisible in standard optical experiments, i.e., refers to ``hidden'' optics of microcavities. By using transient four-wave mixing and pump-probe spectroscopies,…
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