Paper
1 March 2010 Advances in optical two-dimensional spectroscopy applied to the study of semiconductor and atomic systems
Alan D. Bristow, Xingcan Dai, Denis Karaiskaj, Galan A. Moody, Steven T. Cundiff
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Abstract
Electronic structure and dynamics are captured by optical 2D-Fourier-transform (2DFT) spectroscopy, which tracks the phase of the nonlinear signal during two time delays of a multi-pulse excitation sequence. These Fourier-transformed spectra separate and isolate overlapping and competing contributions to the coherent response. We have developed an ultra-stable platform consisting of nested interferometers with active phase control, allowing for exploration of single- and two-quantum coherences. Phase-resolved spectra are retrieved by all-optical determination of experimental phase ambiguities. GaAs quantum wells show suppression of many-body interactions in cross-linear polarized 2DFT spectra and many-body two-quantum coherences. Potassium vapor also shows unexpected two-quantum coherences.
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Alan D. Bristow, Xingcan Dai, Denis Karaiskaj, Galan A. Moody, and Steven T. Cundiff "Advances in optical two-dimensional spectroscopy applied to the study of semiconductor and atomic systems", Proc. SPIE 7600, Ultrafast Phenomena in Semiconductors and Nanostructure Materials XIV, 76001E (1 March 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.840771
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KEYWORDS
Spectroscopy

Potassium

Quantum wells

Gallium arsenide

Semiconductors

Excitons

Polarization

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