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      Experimental Observation of Strong Coupling Between an Epsilon-Near-Zero Mode in a Deep Subwavelength Nanofilm and a Gap Plasmon Mode

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          Abstract

          Strong coupling is a phenomenon which occurs when the interaction between two resonance systems is so strong that the oscillatory energy exchange between them exceeds all dissipative loss channels. Each resonance can then no longer be described individually but only as a part of the coupled, hybrid system. Here, we show that strong coupling can occur in a deep subwavelength nanofilm supporting an epsilon near zero mode which is integrated into a metal-insulator-metal gap plasmon structure. To generate an epsilon near zero mode resonance in the short-wave infrared region, an indium tin oxide nanofilm of ~lambda/100 thickness is used. A polariton splitting value of 27%, corresponding to a normalized coupling rate of 0.135, is experimentally demonstrated. Simulations indicate that much larger coupling rates, well within the ultra-strong regime where the energy exchange rate is comparable with the frequency of light, are possible.

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          Observation of the coupled exciton-photon mode splitting in a semiconductor quantum microcavity

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            Vacuum Rabi splitting in semiconductors

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              Sub-cycle switch-on of ultrastrong light-matter interaction.

              Controlling the way light interacts with material excitations is at the heart of cavity quantum electrodynamics (QED). In the strong-coupling regime, quantum emitters in a microresonator absorb and spontaneously re-emit a photon many times before dissipation becomes effective, giving rise to mixed light-matter eigenmodes. Recent experiments in semiconductor microcavities reached a new limit of ultrastrong coupling, where photon exchange occurs on timescales comparable to the oscillation period of light. In this limit, ultrafast modulation of the coupling strength has been suggested to lead to unconventional QED phenomena. Although sophisticated light-matter coupling has been achieved in all three spatial dimensions, control in the fourth dimension, time, is little developed. Here we use a quantum-well waveguide structure to optically tune light-matter interaction from weak to ultrastrong and turn on maximum coupling within less than one cycle of light. In this regime, a class of extremely non-adiabatic phenomena becomes observable. In particular, we directly monitor how a coherent photon population converts to cavity polaritons during abrupt switching. This system forms a promising laboratory in which to study novel sub-cycle QED effects and represents an efficient room-temperature switching device operating at unprecedented speed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                09 January 2018
                Article
                1801.03139
                8fff915f-c3a1-4313-962a-f0620feea7a3

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                physics.optics cond-mat.mes-hall

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