Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Klimmer, Sebastian, Lettau, Thomas, Molina, Laura Valencia, Kartashov, Daniil, Peschel, Ulf, Wilhelm, Jan, Neshev, Dragomir, Soavi, Giancarlo
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.06130
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866917294215528448
author Klimmer, Sebastian
Lettau, Thomas
Molina, Laura Valencia
Kartashov, Daniil
Peschel, Ulf
Wilhelm, Jan
Neshev, Dragomir
Soavi, Giancarlo
author_facet Klimmer, Sebastian
Lettau, Thomas
Molina, Laura Valencia
Kartashov, Daniil
Peschel, Ulf
Wilhelm, Jan
Neshev, Dragomir
Soavi, Giancarlo
contents Light-matter interactions in crystals are powerful tools that seamlessly allow both functionalities of sizeable bandgap modulation and non-invasive spectroscopy. While we often assume that the border between the two regimes of modulation and detection is sharp and well-defined, there are experiments where the boundaries fade. The study of these transition regions allows us to identify the real potentials and inherent limitations of the most commonly used optical spectroscopy techniques. Here, we measure and explain the co-existence between bandgap modulation and non-invasive spectroscopy in the case of resonant perturbative nonlinear optics in an atomically thin direct gap semiconductor. We report a clear deviation from the typical quadratic power scaling of second-harmonic generation near an exciton resonance, and we explain this unusual result based on all-optical modulation driven by the intensity-dependent optical Stark and Bloch-Siegert shifts in the $\pm$K valleys of the Brillouin zone. Our experimental results are corroborated by analytical and numerical analysis based on the semiconductor Bloch equations, from which we extract the resonant transition dipole moments and dephasing times of the used sample. These findings redefine the meaning of perturbative nonlinear optics by revealing how coherent light-matter interactions can modify the band structure of a crystal, even in the weak-field regime. Furthermore, our results strengthen the understanding of ultrafast all-optical control of electronic states in two-dimensional materials, with potential applications in valleytronics, Floquet engineering, and light-wave electronics.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2504_06130
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Ultrafast Coherent Bandgap Modulation Probed by Parametric Nonlinear Optics
Klimmer, Sebastian
Lettau, Thomas
Molina, Laura Valencia
Kartashov, Daniil
Peschel, Ulf
Wilhelm, Jan
Neshev, Dragomir
Soavi, Giancarlo
Optics
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Light-matter interactions in crystals are powerful tools that seamlessly allow both functionalities of sizeable bandgap modulation and non-invasive spectroscopy. While we often assume that the border between the two regimes of modulation and detection is sharp and well-defined, there are experiments where the boundaries fade. The study of these transition regions allows us to identify the real potentials and inherent limitations of the most commonly used optical spectroscopy techniques. Here, we measure and explain the co-existence between bandgap modulation and non-invasive spectroscopy in the case of resonant perturbative nonlinear optics in an atomically thin direct gap semiconductor. We report a clear deviation from the typical quadratic power scaling of second-harmonic generation near an exciton resonance, and we explain this unusual result based on all-optical modulation driven by the intensity-dependent optical Stark and Bloch-Siegert shifts in the $\pm$K valleys of the Brillouin zone. Our experimental results are corroborated by analytical and numerical analysis based on the semiconductor Bloch equations, from which we extract the resonant transition dipole moments and dephasing times of the used sample. These findings redefine the meaning of perturbative nonlinear optics by revealing how coherent light-matter interactions can modify the band structure of a crystal, even in the weak-field regime. Furthermore, our results strengthen the understanding of ultrafast all-optical control of electronic states in two-dimensional materials, with potential applications in valleytronics, Floquet engineering, and light-wave electronics.
title Ultrafast Coherent Bandgap Modulation Probed by Parametric Nonlinear Optics
topic Optics
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.06130