Bose-Einstein condensation of stationary-light polaritons
Abstract
We propose and analyze a mechanism for Bose-Einstein condensation of stationary dark-state polaritons. Dark-state polaritons (DSPs) are formed in the interaction of light with laser-driven 3-level Lambda-type atoms and are the basis of phenomena such as electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT), ultra-slow and stored light. They have long intrinsic lifetimes and in a stationary set-up with two counterpropagating control fields of equal intensity have a 3D quadratic dispersion profile with variable effective mass. Since DSPs are bosons they can undergo a Bose-Einstein condensation at a critical temperature which can be many orders of magnitude larger than that of atoms. We show that thermalization of polaritons can occur via elastic collisions mediated by a resonantly enhanced optical Kerr nonlinearity on a time scale short compared to the decay time. Finally condensation can be observed by turning stationary into propagating polaritons and monitoring the emitted light.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0807.3484,
title = {Bose-Einstein condensation of stationary-light polaritons},
author = {Michael Fleischhauer and Johannes Otterbach and Razmik G. Unanyan},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0807.3484},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
4 pages, 3 figures