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July 9, 2025

Keeping the photon in the dark: A new method for full control of quantum dots

Researchers assemble a large cryostat in an experimental physics laboratory, preparing for ultra-low temperature experiments with quantum dots on a semiconductor chip. Credit: Universität Innsbruck
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Researchers assemble a large cryostat in an experimental physics laboratory, preparing for ultra-low temperature experiments with quantum dots on a semiconductor chip. Credit: Universität Innsbruck

Excitons—bound pairs of electrons and an electron hole—are quasiparticles that can arise in solids. While so-called "bright" excitons emit light and are therefore accessible, dark excitons are optically inactive. As a result, they have a significantly longer lifetime—which makes them ideal for storing and controlling quantum states and using them for advanced methods to generate entanglement.

Gregor Weihs and his team from the Department of Experimental ÌÇÐÄÊÓÆµics at the University of Innsbruck, together with researchers in Dortmund, Bayreuth, and Linz, have now demonstrated a versatile method that can be used to control dark excitons in .

The work is in Science Advances.

Quantum dots on a semiconductor material (center of the image) can be precisely controlled. Credit: Universität Innsbruck
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Quantum dots on a semiconductor material (center of the image) can be precisely controlled. Credit: Universität Innsbruck

"Using chirped laser pulses and a , we can manipulate the spin state of these excitons in a controlled manner and transform bright excitons into dark ones. We can also reverse this process and turn dark excitons back into bright ones," explain Florian Kappe and René Schwarz, first authors of the study.

"In this way, the state can be kept in the dark for a prolonged period of time and reactivated later."

In the experiment at the University of Innsbruck, the researchers were able to show how an was stored in a dark state and converted back into a bright state by a further laser pulse. "This opens up new opportunities for the control of quantum memories and the generation of entangled in quantum dots," says Weihs, head of the research group.

More information: Florian Kappe, Keeping the photon in the dark: Enabling quantum dot dark state control by chirped pulses and magnetic fields, Science Advances (2025). .

Journal information: Science Advances

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A method combining chirped laser pulses and magnetic fields enables controlled manipulation of exciton spin states in semiconductor quantum dots, allowing reversible conversion between bright and dark excitons. This approach permits prolonged storage of quantum states in dark excitons and their subsequent reactivation, advancing quantum memory control and entangled photon pair generation.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.