Spontaneous Formation and Switching of Optical Patterns in Semiconductor Microcavities

Author(s):  
Jacob Scheuer ◽  
Meir Orenstein
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Wang ◽  
Huawen Xu ◽  
Rui Su ◽  
Yutian Peng ◽  
Jinqi Wu ◽  
...  

AbstractExciton-polariton condensation is regarded as a spontaneous macroscopic quantum phenomenon with phase ordering and collective coherence. By engineering artificial annular potential landscapes in halide perovskite semiconductor microcavities, we experimentally and theoretically demonstrate the room-temperature spontaneous formation of a coherent superposition of exciton-polariton orbital states with symmetric petal-shaped patterns in real space, resulting from symmetry breaking due to the anisotropic effective potential of the birefringent perovskite crystals. The lobe numbers of such petal-shaped polariton condensates can be precisely controlled by tuning the annular potential geometry. These petal-shaped condensates form in multiple orbital states, carrying locked alternating π phase shifts and vortex–antivortex superposition cores, arising from the coupling of counterrotating exciton-polaritons in the confined circular waveguide. Our geometrically patterned microcavity exhibits promise for realizing room-temperature topological polaritonic devices and optical polaritonic switches based on periodic annular potentials.


2003 ◽  
Vol 173 (9) ◽  
pp. 995
Author(s):  
V.D. Kulakovskii ◽  
D.N. Krizhanovskii ◽  
A.I. Tartakovskii ◽  
Nikolai A. Gippius ◽  
Sergei G. Tikhodeev

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Pérez-Villa ◽  
Thomas Georgelin ◽  
Jean-François Lambert ◽  
Marie-Christine Maurel ◽  
François Guyot ◽  
...  

Understanding the mechanism of spontaneous formation of ribonucleotides under realistic prebiotic conditions is a key open issue of origins-of-life research. In cells, <i>de novo</i> and salvage nucleotide enzymatic synthesis combines 5-phospho-α -D-ribose-1-diphosphate ( α-PRPP) and nucleobases. Interestingly, these reactants are also known as prebiotically plausible compounds. Combining ab initio simulations with mass spectrometry experiments, we compellingly demonstrate that nucleobases and α -PRPP spontaneously combine, through the same facile mechanism, forming both purine and pyrimidine ribonucleotides, under mild hydrothermal conditions. Surprisingly, this mechanism is very similar to the biological one, and yields ribonucleotides with the same anomeric carbon chirality as in biological systems. These results suggest that natural selection might have optimized – through enzymes – a pre-existing ribonucleotide formation mechanism, carrying it forward to modern life forms.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Pérez-Villa ◽  
Thomas Georgelin ◽  
Jean-François Lambert ◽  
Marie-Christine Maurel ◽  
François Guyot ◽  
...  

Understanding the mechanism of spontaneous formation of ribonucleotides under realistic prebiotic conditions is a key open issue of origins-of-life research. In cells, <i>de novo</i> and salvage nucleotide enzymatic synthesis combines 5-phospho-α -D-ribose-1-diphosphate ( α-PRPP) and nucleobases. Interestingly, these reactants are also known as prebiotically plausible compounds. Combining ab initio simulations with mass spectrometry experiments, we compellingly demonstrate that nucleobases and α -PRPP spontaneously combine, through the same facile mechanism, forming both purine and pyrimidine ribonucleotides, under mild hydrothermal conditions. Surprisingly, this mechanism is very similar to the biological one, and yields ribonucleotides with the same anomeric carbon chirality as in biological systems. These results suggest that natural selection might have optimized – through enzymes – a pre-existing ribonucleotide formation mechanism, carrying it forward to modern life forms.


1988 ◽  
Vol 43 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 938-947 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rolf-M. Servuss

The spontaneous formation of giant (diameter > 10 μm) vesicles from a number of phospholipids in excess aqueous solution has been studied by light-microscopy. Electrically neutral as well as charged phospholipids swell to form giant vesicles only if the lipids are in the fluid phase. This shows that electrostatic repulsion alone cannot explain the spontaneous formation of giant vesicles. The results confirm the suggestion that steric forces between extended membranes play a significant part in this process.


2018 ◽  
Vol 52 (14) ◽  
pp. 1827-1832
Author(s):  
A. A. Demenev ◽  
A. S. Brichkin ◽  
S. S. Gavrilov ◽  
N. A. Gippius ◽  
V. D. Kulakovskii

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