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The inelastic scattering and conversion process between photons and phonons by laser-driven quantum dots is analyzed for a honeycomb array of optomechanical cells. Using Floquet theory for an effective two-level system, we solve the related time-dependent scattering problem, beyond the standard rotating-wave approximation approach, for a plane Dirac-photon wave hitting a cylindrical oscillating barrier that couples the radiation field to the vibrational degrees of freedom. We demonstrate different scattering regimes and discuss the formation of polaritonic quasiparticles. We show that sideband-scattering becomes important when the energies of the sidebands are located in the vicinity of avoided crossings of the quasienergy bands. The interference of Floquet states belonging to different sidebands causes a mixing of long-wavelength (quantum) and short-wavelength (quasiclassical) behavior, making it possible to use the oscillating quantum dot as a kind of transistor for light and sound. We comment under which conditions the setup can be utilized to observe zitterbewegung.
Directional transport is obtained in various multimode systems by driving multiple, nonreciprocally-interfering interactions between individual bosonic modes. However, systems sustaining the required number of modes become physically complex. In our
Valley degrees of freedom offer a potential resource for quantum information processing if they can be effectively controlled. We discuss an optical approach to this problem in which intense light breaks electronic symmetries of a two-dimensional Dir
Topological states of matter are particularly robust, since they exploit global features insensitive to local perturbations. In this work, we describe how to create a Chern insulator of phonons in the solid state. The proposed implementation is based
Electrons in a lattice exhibit time-periodic motion, known as Bloch oscillation, when subject to an additional static electric field. Here we show that a corresponding dynamics can occur upon replacing the spatially periodic potential by a time-perio
We demonstrate how the properties of light-induced electronic Floquet states in solids impact natural physical observables, such as transport properties, by capturing the environmental influence on the electrons. We include the environment as dissipa