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We study the formation of an exciton condensate in GaAs coupled quantum wells at low temperatures. We show that the condensate consists of dark excitons, and extends over hundreds of {mu}m, limited only by the boundaries of the mesa. We find that the condensate density is determined by spin flipping collisions among the condensate excitons and with the thermal bath. We show that these processes, which convert dark excitons to bright, evaporatively cool the system to temperatures that are much lower than the bath temperature. We present a rate equations model, which explains the temperature and power dependence of the exciton density, and in particular - the large density buildup at low temperatures. We confirm the validity of the model by reproducing the unique behavior observed when a magnetic field is applied in a direction parallel to the layers.
We present an experimental study on the ignition and decay of a polariton optical parametric oscillator (OPO) in a semiconductor microcavity pillar. The combination of a continuous wave laser pump, under quasi-phase matching conditions, and a non-res
We calculate the evaporative cooling dynamics of trapped one-dimensional Bose-Einstein condensates for parameters leading to a range of condensates and quasicondensates in the final equilibrium state. We confirm that solitons are created during the e
We report on our recent progress in the manipulation and cooling of a magnetically guided, high flux beam of $^{87}{rm Rb}$ atoms. Typically $7times 10^9$ atoms per second propagate in a magnetic guide providing a transverse gradient of 800 G/cm, wit
Coherent coupling between excitons is at the heart of many-body interactions with transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) heterostructures as an emergent platform for the investigation of these interactions. We employ multi-dimensional coherent spectro
Interacting Bosons, loaded in artificial lattices, have emerged as a modern platform to explore collective manybody phenomena, quantum phase transitions and exotic phases of matter as well as to enable advanced on chip simulators. Such experiments st