Login / Signup

Dynamical formation of a strongly correlated dark condensate of dipolar excitons.

Yotam Mazuz-HarpazKobi CohenMichael LevesonKen WestLoren PfeifferMaxim KhodasRonen Rapaport
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2019)
Strongly interacting bosons display a rich variety of quantum phases, the study of which has so far been focused in the dilute regime, at a fixed number of particles. Here we demonstrate the formation of a dense Bose-Einstein condensate in a long-lived dark spin state of 2D dipolar excitons. A dark condensate of weakly interacting excitons is very fragile, being unstable against a coherent coupling of dark and bright spin states. Remarkably, we find that strong dipole-dipole interactions stabilize the dark condensate. As a result, the dark phase persists up to densities high enough for a dark quantum liquid to form. The striking experimental observation of a step-like dependence of the exciton density on the pump power is reproduced quantitatively by a model describing the nonequilibrium dynamics of driven coupled dark and bright condensates. This unique behavior marks a dynamical condensation to dark states with lifetimes as long as a millisecond, followed by a brightening transition at high densities.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • molecular dynamics
  • room temperature
  • energy transfer
  • single molecule
  • protein kinase
  • ionic liquid
  • transition metal