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Dive into the research topics where Peter Kirton is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Kirton.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Nonequilibrium model of photon condensation.

Peter Kirton; Jonathan Keeling

We develop a nonequilibrium model of condensation and lasing of photons in a dye filled microcavity. We examine in detail the nature of the thermalization process induced by absorption and emission of photons by the dye molecules, and investigate when the photons are able to reach a thermal equilibrium Bose-Einstein distribution. At low temperatures, or large cavity losses, the absorption and emission rates are too small to allow the photons to reach thermal equilibrium and the behavior becomes more like that of a conventional laser.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Suppressing and restoring the Dicke superradiance transition by dephasing and decay

Peter Kirton; Jonathan Keeling

We show that dephasing of individual atoms destroys the superradiance transition of the Dicke model, but that adding individual decay toward the spin down state can restore this transition. To demonstrate this, we present a method to give an exact solution for the N atom problem with individual dephasing which scales polynomially with N. By comparing finite size scaling of our exact solution to a cumulant expansion, we confirm the destruction and restoration of the superradiance transition hold in the thermodynamic limit.


Physical Review A | 2015

Thermalization and breakdown of thermalization in photon condensates

Peter Kirton; Jonathan Keeling

The authors acknowledge financial support from EPSRC program “TOPNES” (Grant No. EP/I031014/1) and EPSRC (Grant No. EP/G004714/2). P.G.K. acknowledges support from EPSRC (Grant No. EP/M010910/1).


Physical Review A | 2016

Excitonic spectral features in strongly coupled organic polaritons

Justyna Cwik; Peter Kirton; Simone De Liberato; Jonathan Keeling

Starting from a microscopic model, we investigate the optical spectra of molecules in strongly coupled organic microcavities examining how they might self-consistently adapt their coupling to light. We consider both rotational and vibrational degrees of freedom, focusing on features which can be seen in the peak in the center of the spectrum at the bare excitonic frequency. In both cases we find that the matter-light coupling can lead to a self-consistent change of the molecular states, with consequent temperature-dependent signatures in the absorption spectrum. However, for typical parameters, these effects are much too weak to explain recent measurements. We show that another mechanism which naturally arises from our model of vibrationally dressed polaritons has the right magnitude and temperature dependence to be at the origin of the observed data.


ACS Photonics | 2017

Exact states and spectra of vibrationally dressed polaritons

M. Ahsan Zeb; Peter Kirton; Jonathan Keeling

Strong coupling between light and matter is possible with a variety of organic materials. In contrast to the simpler inorganic case, organic materials often have a complicated spectrum, with vibrationally dressed electronic transitions. Strong coupling to light competes with this vibrational dressing and, if strong enough, can suppress the entanglement between electronic and vibrational degrees of freedom. By exploiting symmetries, we can perform exact numerical diagonalization to find the polaritonic states for intermediate numbers of molecules and use these to define and validate accurate expressions for the lower polariton states and strong-coupling spectrum in the thermodynamic limit. Using this approach, we find that vibrational decoupling occurs as a sharp transition above a critical matter–light coupling strength. We also demonstrate how the polariton spectrum evolves with the number of molecules, recovering classical linear optics results only at large N.


Physical Review A | 2016

Bath induced coherence and the secular approximation

P. R. Eastham; Peter Kirton; H. M. Cammack; Brendon W. Lovett; Jonathan Keeling

Finding efficient descriptions of how an environment affects a collection of discrete quantum systems would lead to new insights into many areas of modern physics. Markovian, or time-local, methods work well for individual systems, but for groups a question arises: does system-bath or inter-system coupling dominate the dissipative dynamics? The answer has profound consequences for the long-time quantum correlations within the system. We consider two bosonic modes coupled to a bath. By comparing an exact solution to different Markovian master equations, we find that a smooth crossover of the equations-of-motion between dominant inter-system and system-bath coupling exists -- but requires a non-secular master equation. We predict a singular behaviour of the dynamics, and show that the ultimate failure of non-secular equations of motion is essentially a failure of the Markov approximation. Our findings justify the use of time-local theories throughout the crossover between system-bath dominated and inter-system-coupling dominated dynamics.


Physical Review A | 2017

Polarization dynamics in a photon Bose-Einstein condensate

Ryan Moodie; Peter Kirton; Jonathan Keeling

It has previously been shown that a dye-filled microcavity can produce a Bose-Einstein condensate of photons. Thermalization of photons is possible via repeated absorption and re-emission by the dye molecules. In this paper, we theoretically explore the behavior of the polarization of light in this system. We find that in contrast to the near complete thermalization between different spatial modes of light, thermalization of polarization states is expected to generally be incomplete. We show that the polarization degree changes significantly from below to above threshold, and explain the dependence of polarization on all relevant material parameters.


New Journal of Physics | 2017

Superradiant and lasing states in driven-dissipative Dicke models

Peter Kirton; Jonathan Keeling

We present the non-equilibrium phase diagram of a model which can demonstrate both Dicke–Hepp–Lieb superradiance and regular lasing by varying the coherent and incoherent driving terms We find that the regions in the phase diagram corresponding to superradiance and standard lasing are always separated by a normal region. We analyse the behaviour of the system using a combination of exact numerics based on permutation symmetry of the density matrix for small to intermediate numbers of molecules, and second order cumulant equations for large numbers of molecules. We find that the nature of the photon distribution in the superradiant and lasing states are very similar, but the emission spectrum is very different. We also show that in the presence of both coherent and incoherent driving, a period-doubling route to a chaotic state occurs.


Physical Review B | 2013

Non-linear dynamics of a driven nanomechanical single electron transistor

Peter Kirton; A. D. Armour

We analyze the response of a nanomechanical resonator to an external drive when it is also coupled to a single-electron transistor (SET). The interaction between the SET electrons and the mechanical resonator depends on the amplitude of the mechanical motion leading to a strongly non-linear response to the drive which is similar to that of a Duffing oscillator. We show that the average dynamics of the resonator is well-described by a simple effective model which incorporates damping and frequency renormalization terms which are amplitude dependent. We also find that for a certain range of parameters the system displays interesting bistable dynamics in which noise arising from charge fluctuations causes the resonator to switch slowly between different dynamical states.


Physical Review A | 2018

Coherence protection in coupled quantum systems

Helen Mary Cammack; Peter Kirton; Thomas M. Stace; P. R. Eastham; Jonathan Keeling; Brendon W. Lovett

The interaction of a quantum system with its environment causes decoherence, setting a fundamental limit on its suitability for quantum information processing. However, we show that if the system consists of coupled parts with different internal energy scales then the interaction of one part with a thermal bath need not lead to loss of coherence from the other. Remarkably, we find that the protected part can remain coherent for longer when the coupling to the bath becomes stronger or the temperature is raised. Our theory will enable the design of decoherence-resistant hybrid quantum computers.

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A. D. Armour

University of Nottingham

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Fabio Pistolesi

Joseph Fourier University

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Artem Strashko

University of St Andrews

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Dainius Kilda

University of St Andrews

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Justyna Cwik

University of St Andrews

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