Theory of Photoluminescence from a Magnetic Field Induced Two-dimensional Quantum Wigner Crystal
Dong-Zi Liu, H.A. Fertig, S. Das Sarma

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework for understanding photoluminescence in a two-dimensional Wigner crystal under strong magnetic fields, revealing how electron-hole interactions influence spectral features and potential experimental observations.
Contribution
It introduces a time-dependent Hartree-Fock theory for photoluminescence in 2D Wigner crystals, analyzing localized and itinerant holes and their effects on spectral structures like the Hofstadter butterfly.
Findings
Localized holes suppress Hofstadter structure in spectra.
Itinerant holes preserve the Hofstadter gap spectrum.
Finite temperature experiments can probe the Hofstadter gaps.
Abstract
We develop a theory of photoluminescence using a time-dependent Hartree-Fock approximation that is appropriate for the two-dimensional Wigner crystal in a strong magnetic field. The cases of localized and itinerant holes are both studied. It is found that the photoluminescence spectrum is a weighted measure of the single particle density of states of the electron system, which for an undisturbed electron lattice has the intricate structure of the Hofstadter butterfly. It is shown that for the case of a localized hole, a strong interaction of the hole with the electron lattice tends to wipe out this structure. In such cases, a single final state is strongly favored in the recombination process, producing a single line in the spectrum. For the case of an itinerant hole, which could be generated in a wide quantum well system, we find that electron-hole interactions do not significantly…
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