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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Superconducting Qubits
Direct observation of the quantum-fluctuation driven amplitude mode in a microcavity polariton condensate
arXiv
Authors: Mark Steger, Ryo Hanai, Alexander Orson Edelman, Peter B Littlewood, David W Snoke, Jonathan Beaumariage, Brian Fluegel, Ken West, Loren N. Pfeiffer, Angelo Mascarenhas
Year
2019
Paper ID
39882
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
142
Citations
N/A
Abstract
The Higgs amplitude mode is a collective excitation studied and observed in a broad class of matter, including superconductors, charge density waves, antiferromagnets, 3He p-wave superfluid, and ultracold atomic condensates. In all the observations reported thus far, the amplitude mode was excited by perturbing the condensate out of equilibrium. Studying an exciton-polariton condensate, here we report the first observation of this mode purely driven by intrinsic quantum fluctuations without such perturbations. By using an ultrahigh quality microcavity and a Raman spectrometer to maximally reject photoluminescence from the condensate, we observe weak but distinct photoluminescence at energies below the condensate emission. We identify this as the so-called ghost branches of the amplitude mode arising from quantum depletion of the condensate into this mode. These energies, as well as the overall structure of the photoluminescence spectra, are in good agreement with our theoretical analysis.
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- The Higgs amplitude mode is a collective excitation studied and observed in a broad class of matter, including superconductors, charge density waves, antiferromagnets, 3He...
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