Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2012
The optically generated excitations in semiconductors constitute a genuine many-body system. To describe its quantum-optical features, we have to expand significantly the theoretical models used so far. However, the important insights of Chapters 16–23 are already presented in a form in which most of them can directly be used and generalized to analyze central properties of the optical excitations in solids. As for atoms, the optical transitions in semiconductors are induced via dipole interaction between photons and electrons. We can thus efficiently construct a systematic quantum-optical theory for semiconductors by following the cluster-expansion approach.
One of the main differences from atoms is that the electronic excitations in semiconductors form a strongly interacting many-body system. Thus, we must systematically treat the arising Coulomb-induced hierarchy problem together with the quantum-optical one. Moreover, the coupling of electrons to lattice vibrations, i.e., the phonons, produces yet another hierarchy problem. In addition, in solid-state spectroscopy one often uses multimode light fields such that one cannot rely on the single-mode simplifications to study semiconductor quantum optics.
As shown in Chapter 15, the Coulomb-, phonon-, and photon-induced hierarchy problems have formally an identical structure. Thus, we start the analysis by investigating how semiconductor quantum optics emerges from the dynamics of correlated clusters. We first focus on the basic properties of the optical transitions in the classical regime. This means investigating the fundamental optical phenomena resulting from the singlets. The full singlet–doublet approach is presented in Chapters 28–30.
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