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Photon Bose-Einstein Condensation in Semiconductors: A Quantum Kinetic Theory

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arxiv 2509.05062 v1 pith:5JZSRSVJ submitted 2025-09-05 physics.optics

Photon Bose-Einstein Condensation in Semiconductors: A Quantum Kinetic Theory

classification physics.optics
keywords quantumphotoncondensationsemiconductorstheorycoulombinteractionskinetic
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Photon condensation in semiconductor microcavities is a transformative technique for engineering quantum states of light at room temperature by tailoring strong but incoherent light-matter interactions. While continuous-wave and electrical pumping offer exceptional prospects for miniaturized quantum photonic technologies, harnessing these requires conceptual advances in understanding nonequilibrium light-matter dynamics in semiconductors. We resolve this challenge through an \textit{ab initio} quantum kinetic theory capturing how Coulomb interactions of optically excited carriers and phonon scattering mediate photon thermalization and condensation in semiconductors. Our microscopic model shows that at high carrier densities, thermalization is dominated by carrier-carrier Coulomb scattering, in clear contrast to the rovibrational relaxation that governs dye-based photon condensates. The theory predicts a rich nonequilibrium phase diagram with thermal, Bose-condensed, multimode, and lasing phases, quantitatively in agreement with recent experiments. Crucially, we identify how cavity detuning controls transitions between equilibrium and gain-dominated regimes, enabling tailored design of coherent light sources. This work thus provides the foundation for semiconductor-based quantum photonic devices operating beyond conventional laser paradigms.

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