Silent White Light
Abstract
We investigate the intra-waveguide statistics manipulation of broadband light by combining semiconductor quantum dot physics with quantum optics. By cooling a quantum dot superluminescent diode to liquid nitrogen temperature of 77K, Blazek et al. [Phys. Rev. A 84, 63840 (2011)] have demonstrated a temperature-dependent reduction of the second-order intensity correlation coefficient from two for thermal amplified spontaneous emission light to g(2)(T=190 K)≈ 1.33. Here, we model the broadband photon statistics assuming amplified spontaneous emission radiation in a pumped, saturable quantum dot gain medium. We demonstrate that, by an intensity increase due to the quantum dot occupation dynamics via the temperature-tuned quasi Fermi levels, together with the saturation nonlinearity, a statistics manipulation from thermal Bose-Einstein statistics towards Poissonian statistics can be realized, thus producing "silent white light". Such intensity-noise reduced broadband radiation is relevant for many applications like optical coherence tomography, optical communication or optical tweezers.
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