Controllable fusion of electromagnetic bosons in two-dimensional semiconductors
Abstract
We propose a physical principle for implementation of controllable interactions of identical electromagnetic bosons (excitons or polaritons) in two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors. The key ingredients are tightly bound biexcitons and in-plane anisotropy of the host structure due to, e.g., a uniaxial strain. We show that anisotropy-induced splitting of the radiative exciton doublet couples the biexciton state to continua of boson scattering states. As a result, two-body elastic scattering of bosons may be resonantly amplified when energetically tuned close to the biexciton by applying a transverse magnetic field or tuning the coupling with the microcavity photon mode. At the resonance, bosonic fields undergo quantum reaction of fusion accompanied by their squeezing. For excitons, we predict giant molecules (Feshbach dimers) which can be obtained from a biexciton via rapid adiabatic sweeping of the magnetic field across the resonance. The molecules possess non-trivial entanglement properties. Our proposal holds promise for the strongly-correlated photonics and quantum chemistry of light.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.