Fermi polaron laser in two-dimensional semiconductors

Francesco Piazza

We study the relaxation dynamics of driven, two-dimensional semiconductors, where itinerant electrons dress optically pumped excitons to form two Fermi-polaron branches. Repulsive polarons excited around zero momentum quickly decay to the attractive branch at high momentum. Collisions with electrons subsequently lead to a slower relaxation of attractive polarons, which accumulate at the edge of the light-cone around zero momentum where the radiative loss dominates. The bosonic nature of exciton polarons enables stimulated scattering, which results in a lasing transition at higher pump power. The latter is characterized by a superlinear increase of light emission as well as extended spatiotemporal coherence. The many-body dressing of excitons can reduce the emission linewidth below the bare exciton linewidth set by nonradiative loss.

[1] Tomasz Wasak, Falko Pientka, Francesco Piazza, arXiv:2103.14040