Photon Blockade in Two-Emitter-Cavity Systems
Abstract
The photon blockade (PB) effect in emitter-cavity systems depends on the anharmonicity of the ladder of dressed energy eigenstates. The recent developments in color center photonics are leading toward experimental demonstrations of multi-emitter-cavity solid-state systems with an expanded set of energy levels compared to the traditionally studied single-emitter systems. We focus on the case of N = 2 nonidentical quasi-atoms strongly coupled to a nanocavity in the bad cavity regime (with parameters within reach of the color center systems), and discover three PB mechanisms: polaritonic, subradiant and unconventional. The polaritonic PB, which is the conventional mechanism studied in single-emitter-cavity systems, also occurs at the polariton frequencies in multi-emitter systems. The subradiant PB is a new interference effect owing to the inhomogeneous broadening of the emitters which results in a purer and a more robust single photon emission than the polaritonic PB. The unconventional PB in the modeled system corresponds to the suppression of the single- and two-photon correlation statistics and the enhancement of the three-photon correlation statistic. Using the effective Hamiltonian approach, we unravel the origin and the time-domain evolution of these phenomena.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1612.03261,
title = {Photon Blockade in Two-Emitter-Cavity Systems},
author = {Marina Radulaski and Kevin A. Fischer and Konstantinos G. Lagoudakis and Jingyuan Linda Zhang and Jelena Vuckovic},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1612.03261},
year = {2017}
}
Comments
5 pages, 5 figures