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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 125(6): 067405, 2020 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32845655

ABSTRACT

We study two-dimensional charge-imbalanced electron-hole systems embedded in an optical microcavity. We find that strong coupling to photons favors states with pairing at zero or small center-of-mass momentum, leading to a condensed state with spontaneously broken time-reversal and rotational symmetry and unpaired carriers that occupy an anisotropic crescent-shaped sliver of momentum space. The crescent state is favored at moderate charge imbalance, while a Fulde-Ferrel-Larkin-Ovchinnikov-like state-with pairing at large center-of-mass momentum-occurs instead at strong imbalance. The crescent state stability results from long-range Coulomb interactions in combination with extremely long-range photon-mediated interactions.

2.
Sci Adv ; 1(11): e1500807, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26665174

ABSTRACT

Vortices are archetypal objects that recur in the universe across the scale of complexity, from subatomic particles to galaxies and black holes. Their appearance is connected with spontaneous symmetry breaking and phase transitions. In Bose-Einstein condensates and superfluids, vortices are both point-like and quantized quasiparticles. We use a two-dimensional (2D) fluid of polaritons, bosonic particles constituted by hybrid photonic and electronic oscillations, to study quantum vortex dynamics. Polaritons benefit from easiness of wave function phase detection, a spinor nature sustaining half-integer vorticity, strong nonlinearity, and tuning of the background disorder. We can directly generate by resonant pulsed excitations a polariton condensate carrying either a full or half-integer vortex as initial condition and follow their coherent evolution using ultrafast imaging on the picosecond scale. The observations highlight a rich phenomenology, such as the spiraling of the half-vortex and the joint path of the twin charges of a full vortex, until the moment of their splitting. Furthermore, we observe the ordered branching into newly generated secondary couples, associated with the breaking of radial and azimuthal symmetries. This allows us to devise the interplay of nonlinearity and sample disorder in shaping the fluid and driving the vortex dynamics. In addition, our observations suggest that phase singularities may be seen as fundamental particles whose quantized events span from pair creation and recombination to 2D+t topological vortex strings.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 103(10): 105304, 2009 Sep 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19792328

ABSTRACT

We consider a mixture of single-component bosonic and fermionic atoms in an array of coupled one-dimensional "tubes." For an attractive Bose-Fermi interaction, we show that the system exhibits phase separation instead of the usual collapse. Moreover, above a critical intertube hopping, all first-order instabilities disappear in both attractive and repulsive mixtures. The possibility of suppressing instabilities in this system suggests a route towards the realization of paired phases, including a superfluid of p-wave pairs unique to the coupled-tube system, and quantum critical phenomena.

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