Coupling quantum tunneling with cavity photons
- PMID: 22491095
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1219010
Coupling quantum tunneling with cavity photons
Abstract
Tunneling of electrons through a potential barrier is fundamental to chemical reactions, electronic transport in semiconductors and superconductors, magnetism, and devices such as terahertz oscillators. Whereas tunneling is typically controlled by electric fields, a completely different approach is to bind electrons into bosonic quasiparticles with a photonic component. Quasiparticles made of such light-matter microcavity polaritons have recently been demonstrated to Bose-condense into superfluids, whereas spatially separated Coulomb-bound electrons and holes possess strong dipole interactions. We use tunneling polaritons to connect these two realms, producing bosonic quasiparticles with static dipole moments. Our resulting three-state system yields dark polaritons analogous to those in atomic systems or optical waveguides, thereby offering new possibilities for electromagnetically induced transparency, room-temperature condensation, and adiabatic photon-to-electron transfer.
Comment in
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Physics. Intertwining electron tunneling with light.Science. 2012 May 11;336(6082):679-80. doi: 10.1126/science.1221416. Science. 2012. PMID: 22582251 No abstract available.
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