Photon-photon correlations from a resonantly driven quantum dot in a microcavity

ORAL

Abstract

We demonstrate strongly driven resonance fluorescence from a single~InGaAs quantum dot in a planar microcavity by measuring the oscillatory second-order correlation function, $g^{(2)}(t)$, of the photoluminescence. Resonance fluorescence is emission from a coherently and resonantly~excited two-level quantum system and under strong CW excitation the system undergoes one or more Rabi oscillations before emitting.~ These oscillations are observed in $g^{(2)}(t)$ rather than the simple anti-bunching dip caused by incoherent excitation. This behavior shows, along with other measurements, that the quantum dot is~well-described by a simple two-level model even at high excitation intensities.~ The dot is resonantly excited with a laser via the waveguide mode of the microcavity and the emission couples into the Fabry-Perot mode where it is collected. The~ability to perform coherent manipulations on a single quantum emitter is a critical step on the~road to many quantum optical devices including high efficiency indistinguishable single photon sources.

Authors

  • Edward Flagg

    • The University of Texas at Austin
  • Andreas Muller

    • NIST Gaithersburg
  • John Robertson

    • The University of Texas at Austin
  • Thai Tran

    • The University of Texas at Austin
  • Dennis Deppe

    • The University of Central Florida
  • Wenquan Ma

    • The University of Arkansas
  • Jaiyu Zhang

    • The University of Arkansas
  • Gregory Salamo

    • The University of Arkansas
    • University of Arkansas, Physics Department, Center for the Semiconductor Physics in Nanosctructures, Fayetteville, Arkansas 72701
  • Chih-Kang Shih

    • The University of Texas at Austin
    • University of Texas at Austin
    • Dept Physics; U. Texas Austin
    • Department of Physics, University of Texas at Austin