Physical Review X (Nov 2020)
Optical Preparation and Coherent Control of Ultrafast Nonlinear Quantum Superpositions in Exciton Gases: A Case Study for Atomically Thin Semiconductors
Abstract
We report on the optical preparation of coherent superpositions of exciton and biexciton states manifested in temporal nonlinear oscillations in interacting exciton gases. The effect is illustrated for atomically thin semiconductors, where the reflected light reveals these interactions in a unique way. The occurring nonlinear coherent oscillations are counteracted by incoherent excitation-induced dephasing, a phenomenon which originates from a new type of quantum interference between excitons and the two-exciton scattering continuum. To improve the experimental accessibility, we discuss different methods to control the oscillation modulation depth by modifying the mutual interplay of the exciton-biexciton superposition and excitation-induced dephasing. We find that the coherent optical response can be manipulated by the polarization degree of the exciting light field, the laser detuning, external magnetic fields, and quantum coherent feedback. The extraordinary temporal behavior and its control distinguishes the nonlinear coherent oscillations from atomic Rabi oscillations and enables their engineering based on our proposed control schemes.