An ultrastrongly coupled single terahertz meta-atom.
Shima RajabaliSergej MarkmannElsa JöchlMattias BeckChristian A LehnerWerner WegscheiderJérôme FaistGiacomo ScalariPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
Free-space coupling to subwavelength individual optical elements is a central theme in quantum optics, as it allows the control over individual quantum systems. Here we show that, by combining an asymmetric immersion lens setup and a complementary resonating metasurface we are able to perform terahertz time-domain spectroscopy of an individual, strongly subwavelength meta-atom. We unravel the linewidth dependence as a function of the meta-atom number indicating quenching of the superradiant coupling. On these grounds, we investigate ultrastrongly coupled Landau polaritons at the single resonator level, measuring a normalized coupling ratio [Formula: see text]. Similar measurements on a lower density two dimensional electron gas yield a coupling ratio [Formula: see text] with a cooperativity C = 94. Our findings pave the way towards the control of ultrastrong light-matter interaction at the single electron/ resonator level. The proposed technique is way more general and can be useful to characterize the complex conductivity of micron-sized samples in the terahertz domain.