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Dive into the research topics where D. D. Solnyshkov is active.

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Featured researches published by D. D. Solnyshkov.


Nature Physics | 2010

Spontaneous formation and optical manipulation of extended polariton condensates

Esther Wertz; Lydie Ferrier; D. D. Solnyshkov; R. Johne; D. Sanvitto; A. Lemaître; I. Sagnes; Roger Grousson; Alexey Kavokin; P. Senellart; G. Malpuech; J. Bloch

Long-lived polariton condensates can propagate well beyond the area of their initial excitation while still maintaining spatial coherence. This enables direct and controllable manipulation of the condensate wavefunction.


Nature Communications | 2015

Exciton–polaritons in van der Waals heterostructures embedded in tunable microcavities

S. Dufferwiel; S. Schwarz; Freddie Withers; A. A. P. Trichet; Feng Li; M. Sich; O. Del Pozo-Zamudio; C. Clark; A. V. Nalitov; D. D. Solnyshkov; G. Malpuech; Ks S. Novoselov; Jason M. Smith; M. S. Skolnick; D. N. Krizhanovskii; Ai I. Tartakovskii

Layered materials can be assembled vertically to fabricate a new class of van der Waals heterostructures a few atomic layers thick, compatible with a wide range of substrates and optoelectronic device geometries, enabling new strategies for control of light–matter coupling. Here, we incorporate molybdenum diselenide/hexagonal boron nitride (MoSe2/hBN) quantum wells in a tunable optical microcavity. Part-light–part-matter polariton eigenstates are observed as a result of the strong coupling between MoSe2 excitons and cavity photons, evidenced from a clear anticrossing between the neutral exciton and the cavity modes with a splitting of 20 meV for a single MoSe2 monolayer, enhanced to 29 meV in MoSe2/hBN/MoSe2 double-quantum wells. The splitting at resonance provides an estimate of the exciton radiative lifetime of 0.4 ps. Our results pave the way for room-temperature polaritonic devices based on multiple-quantum-well van der Waals heterostructures, where polariton condensation and electrical polariton injection through the incorporation of graphene contacts may be realized.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Polarization multistability of cavity polaritons.

N. A. Gippius; I. A. Shelykh; D. D. Solnyshkov; S. S. Gavrilov; Yuri G. Rubo; A. V. Kavokin; S. G. Tikhodeev; G. Malpuech

New effects of polarization multistability and polarization hysteresis in a coherently driven polariton system in a semiconductor microcavity are predicted and theoretically analyzed. The multistability arises due to polarization-dependent polariton-polariton interactions and can be revealed in polarization resolved photoluminescence experiments. The pumping power required to observe this effect is 4 orders of magnitude lower than the characteristic pumping power in conventional bistable optical systems.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Polariton Z topological insulator.

A. V. Nalitov; D. D. Solnyshkov; G. Malpuech

We demonstrate that honeycomb arrays of microcavity pillars behave as an optical-frequency two-dimensional photonic topological insulator. We show that the interplay between the photonic spin-orbit coupling natively present in this system and the Zeeman splitting of exciton polaritons in external magnetic fields leads to the opening of a nontrivial gap characterized by a C=±2 set of band Chern numbers and to the formation of topologically protected one-way edge states.


Nature Communications | 2013

Polariton condensation in solitonic gap states in a one-dimensional periodic potential

Dimitrii Tanese; Hugo Flayac; D. D. Solnyshkov; A. Amo; A. Lemaître; Elisabeth Galopin; R. Braive; P. Senellart; I. Sagnes; G. Malpuech; J. Bloch

Manipulation of nonlinear waves in artificial periodic structures leads to spectacular spatial features, such as generation of gap solitons or onset of the Mott insulator phase transition. Cavity exciton–polaritons are strongly interacting quasiparticles offering large possibilities for potential optical technologies. Here we report their condensation in a one-dimensional microcavity with a periodic modulation. The resulting mini-band structure dramatically influences the condensation process. Contrary to non-modulated cavities, where condensates expand, here, we observe spontaneous condensation in localized gap soliton states. Depending on excitation conditions, we access different dynamical regimes: we demonstrate the formation of gap solitons either moving along the ridge or bound to the potential created by the reservoir of uncondensed excitons. We also find Josephson oscillations of gap solitons triggered between the two sides of the reservoir. This system is foreseen as a building block for polaritonic circuits, where propagation and localization are optically controlled and reconfigurable.


Nature Communications | 2014

All-optical phase modulation in a cavity-polariton Mach–Zehnder interferometer

C. Sturm; Dimitrii Tanese; Hai-Son Nguyen; Hugo Flayac; Elisabeth Galopin; A. Lemaître; I. Sagnes; D. D. Solnyshkov; A. Amo; G. Malpuech; J. Bloch

We report on a new mechanism of giant phase modulation. The phenomenon arises when a dispersed photonic mode (slow light) strongly couples to an excitonic resonance. In such a case, even a small amount of optically injected carriers creates a potential barrier for the propagating exciton-polariton which provokes a considerable phase shift. We evidence this effect by fabricating an exciton-polariton Mach-Zehnder interferometer, modulating the output intensity by constructive or destructive interferences controlled by optical pumping of a micrometric size area. The figure of merit for a {\pi} phase shift, defined by the control power times length of the modulated region, is found at least one order of magnitude smaller than slow light photonic crystal waveguides.Quantum fluids based on light is a highly developing research field, since they provide a nonlinear platform for developing optical functionalities and quantum simulators. An important issue in this context is the ability to coherently control the properties of the fluid. Here we propose an all-optical approach for controlling the phase of a flow of cavity-polaritons, making use of their strong interactions with localized excitons. Here we illustrate the potential of this method by implementing a compact exciton–polariton interferometer, which output intensity and polarization can be optically controlled. This interferometer is cascadable with already reported polariton devices and is promising for future polaritonic quantum optic experiments. Complex phase patterns could be also engineered using this optical method, providing a key tool to build photonic artificial gauge fields.


Nature Physics | 2012

Half-solitons in a polariton quantum fluid behave like magnetic monopoles

R. Hivet; Hugo Flayac; D. D. Solnyshkov; Dimitrii Tanese; Thomas Boulier; D. Andreoli; E. Giacobino; J. Bloch; A. Bramati; G. Malpuech; A. Amo

An analogue of a magnetic monopole is now observed in a condensed state of light–matter hybrid particles known as cavity polaritons. Spin-phase excitations of the polariton fluid are accelerated along the cavity under the influence of a magnetic field—just as if they were single magnetic charges.


Physical Review X | 2015

Spin-Orbit Coupling for Photons and Polaritons in Microstructures

V. G. Sala; D. D. Solnyshkov; Iacopo Carusotto; Thibaut Jacqmin; A. Lemaître; H. Terças; A. V. Nalitov; Marco Abbarchi; Elisabeth Galopin; I. Sagnes; J. Bloch; G. Malpuech; A. Amo

We use coupled micropillars etched out of a semiconductor microcavity to engineer a spin-orbit Hamiltonian for photons and polaritons in a microstructure. The coupling between the spin and orbital momentum arises from the polarization-dependent confinement and tunneling of photons between adjacent micropillars arranged in the form of a hexagonal photonic molecule. It results in polariton eigenstates with distinct polarization patterns, which are revealed in photoluminescence experiments in the regime of polariton condensation. Thanks to the strong polariton nonlinearities, our system provides a photonic workbench for the quantum simulation of the interplay between interactions and spin-orbit effects, particularly when extended to two-dimensional lattices.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

Theory of exciton-polariton lasing at room temperature in ZnO microcavities

R. Johne; D. D. Solnyshkov; G. Malpuech

We use the semiclassical Boltzmann equations to describe the exciton-polariton relaxation in a bulk ZnO microcavity at room temperature. We present kinetic phase diagrams which report the lasing threshold versus the main sample parameters, such as the polariton lifetime or the value of the Rabi splitting. We find that the polariton laser is operating close to the thermodynamic equilibrium in most cases which makes advantageous the use of microcavities showing very large Rabi splittings as it is the case in ZnO structures. We find that room temperature polariton lasing could be observed in the samples presently available.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Proposal for a Mesoscopic Optical Berry-Phase Interferometer

I. A. Shelykh; G. Pavlovic; D. D. Solnyshkov; G. Malpuech

We propose a novel spin-optronic device based on the interference of polaritonic waves traveling in opposite directions and gaining topological Berry phase. It is governed by the ratio of the TE-TM and Zeeman splittings, which can be used to control the output intensity. Because of the peculiar orientation of the TE-TM effective magnetic field for polaritons, there is no analogue of the Aharonov-Casher phase shift existing for electrons.

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G. Malpuech

Blaise Pascal University

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I. A. Shelykh

University of Southampton

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Hugo Flayac

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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A. V. Kavokin

University of Southampton

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J. Bloch

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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A. V. Nalitov

Blaise Pascal University

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H. Terças

Blaise Pascal University

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A. Amo

Université Paris-Saclay

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N. A. Gippius

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A. Lemaître

Université Paris-Saclay

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