Spontaneous Emission Spectra and Quantum Light-Matter Interactions from a Strongly-Coupled Quantum Dot Metal-Nanoparticle System (1110.3306v2)
Abstract: We investigate the quantum optical properties of a single photon emitter coupled to a finite-size metal nanoparticle using a photon Green function technique that rigorously quantizes the electromagnetic fields. We first obtain pronounced Purcell factors and photonic Lamb shifts for both a 7-nm and 20-nm radius metal nanoparticle, without adopting a dipole approximation. We then consider a quantum-dot photon emitter positioned sufficiently near to the metal nanoparticle so that the strong coupling regime is possible. Accounting for non-dipole interactions, quenching, and photon transport from the dot to the detector, we demonstrate that the strong coupling regime should be observable in the far-field spontaneous emission spectrum, even at room temperature. The emission spectra show that the usual vacuum Rabi doublet becomes a rich spectral triplet or quartet with two of the four peaks anticrossing, which survives in spite of significant non-radiative decays. We discuss the emitted light spectrum and the effects of quenching for two different dipole polarizations.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.