Abstract
Mobile quantum impurities interacting with a fermionic bath form quasiparticles known as Fermi polarons. We demonstrate that a force applied to the bath particles can generate a drag force of similar magnitude acting on the impurities, realizing a novel, nonperturbative Coulomb drag effect. To prove this, we calculate the fully self-consistent, frequency-dependent transconductivity at zero temperature in the Baym-Kadanoff conserving approximation. We apply our theory to excitons and exciton polaritons interacting with a bath of charge carriers in a doped semiconductor embedded in a microcavity. In external electric and magnetic fields, the drag effect enables electrical control of excitons and may pave the way for the implementation of gauge fields for excitons and polaritons. Moreover, a reciprocal effect may facilitate optical manipulation of electron transport. Our findings establish transport measurements as a novel, powerful tool for probing the many-body physics of mobile quantum impurities. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000373094Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Physical Review XVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
American Institute of PhysicsOrganisational unit
03636 - Imamoglu, Atac / Imamoglu, Atac
Funding
671000 - Interacting polaritons in two-dimensional electron systems (EC)
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