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Colliding Electrons and Holes in Semiconductors to Reconstruct Berry Curvature

ORAL

Abstract

Electron-hole recollisions occur when a probe laser beam excites electron-hole pairs in a semiconductor that is driven by sufficiently strong THz-frequency electric fields [1]. The THz accelerates the electron-hole pairs and causes recollision, leading to the release of photons at higher energy than the probe in a process called high order sideband generation (HSG).

The intensity and polarization of each sideband depends on the relative polarizations of the probe and THz [2]. One cause of this dynamical birefringence is quantum interference between electron-hole recollision pathways under non-Abelian Berry curvature from the coupling between valence bands. In this talk I will present HSG experiments done in GaAs and demonstrate how to extract parameters relating to hole dynamics. This procedure opens the door to measurements of the complete electronic structure of semiconductors, including Berry curvature, Bloch wavefunctions, and effective Hamiltonian parameters.
References:
Zaks, B., et al., Nature, 483, 580-583 (2012); Zaks, B., et al., APL, 102, 012104 (2013); Banks, H., et al., PRL, 111, 267402 (2013)
Banks, H., et al., PRX, 7, 0401042 (2017)

Presenters

  • Joseph Costello

    Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara

Authors

  • Joseph Costello

    Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara

  • Seamus O'Hara

    Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara

  • Darren Valovcin

    Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara

  • Qile Wu

    Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of Michigan

  • Mackillo Kira

    Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of Michigan

  • Loren Pfeiffer

    Princeton University, Electrical Engineering, Princeton University, Electrical engineering, Princeton university, Princeton Univ, Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University, electrical engineering, Princeton, Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, 08544, USA

  • Mark Stephen Sherwin

    Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara