CPM Seminar
Phonon-Dressed Mollow Triplets and Mollow Quintuplets
from Coherently Driven Quantum Dots
Stephen Hughes
Department of Physics Queen's University
In 1969 Mollow demonstrated that the fluorescence spectrum of a laser
driven two-level atom has two Rabi sidebands in addition to a central
Rayleigh-scattering peak, producing the so-called Mollow triplet
[1]. This striking quantum optics phenomenon has been
widely studied in a number of atomic and molecular systems. For decades the
semiconductor optics community has been trying to access the "quantum-dot
Mollow triplet," and, by combining single quantum dots with semiconductor
cavities, recently succeeded [2]. Coherently driven quantum
dots are fundamentally interesting and have applications in quantum information
science.
Quantum dots are often likened to ‘artificial atoms,’ but
they have unique solid-state microscopic processes, such as electron-phonon
scattering. This talk will describe the resonance fluorescence spectra of a
driven quantum dot placed inside a semiconductor microcavity and interacting
with an acoustic phonon bath [3]. A series of light-matter
interaction regimes that are unique to the semiconductor environment
will be introduced including, phonon-mediated incoherent excitation
[4], excitation induced dephasing and pronounced
exciton-cavity feeding [3,5]. I will describe
a polaron master equation approach to understanding these novel phenomena
and make a direct connection to experimental data for InAs quantum dots.
Finally, I will show some very recent theory and experiments that introduce
the ‘Mollow quintuplet’ regime where the usual Mollow
triplet evolves into five separate spectral peaks.
[1] B. R. Mollow, Phys. Rev. 188, 1969
(1969).
[2] See, e.g., E. B. Flagg et al., Nature Phys.
5, 203> (2009); A. N. Vamivakas et al., Nature Phys.
5, 198 (2009).
[3] C. Roy and S. Hughes, Phys. Rev. Lett.
106, 247403 (2011).
[4] S. Weiler., A. Ulhaq, S. M. Ulrich,
D. Richter, M. Jetteri, P. Michler, C. Roy, and
S. Hughes, Phys. Rev. B Rapid Communications 86, 241304
(2012).
[5] S. M. Ulrich, S. Ates, S. Reitzenstein,
A Loffler, A. Forchel, and P. Michler, Phys. Rev. Lett. 106,
247402 (2011).
Thursday, February 21st 2013, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Boardroom (room 105)
|