Voltage-Controlled Optics of a Quantum Dot
arXiv:cond-mat/0408089 · doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.93.217401
Abstract
We show how the optical properties of a single semiconductor quantum dot can be controlled with a small dc voltage applied to a gate electrode. We find that the transmission spectrum of the neutral exciton exhibits two narrow lines with $\sim 2$ $μ$eV linewidth. The splitting into two linearly polarized components arises through an exchange interaction within the exciton. The exchange interaction can be turned off by choosing a gate voltage where the dot is occupied with an additional electron. Saturation spectroscopy demonstrates that the neutral exciton behaves as a two-level system. Our experiments show that the remaining problem for manipulating excitonic quantum states in this system is spectral fluctuation on a $μ$eV energy scale.
4 pages, 4 figures; content as published