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We study theoretically the optical response of a nanohybrid comprising a symmetric quantum dimer emitter coupled to a metal nanoparticle (MNP). The interactions between the exitonic transitions in the dimer and the plasmons in the MNP lead to novel effects in the composites input-output characteristics for the light intensity and the absorption spectrum, which we study in the linear and nonlinear regimes. We fnd that the exciton-plasmon hybridization leads to optical bistability and hysteresis for the one-exciton transition and enhancement of excitation for the two-exciton transition. The latter leads to a signifcant decrease of the field strength needed to saturate the system. In the linear regime, the absortion spectrum has a dispersive (Fano-like) line shape. The spectral position and shape of this spectrum depend on the detuning of the dimers one-exciton resonance relative to the plasmon resonance. Upon increasing the applied field intensity to the nonlinear regime, the Fano-like singularities in the absorption spectra are smeared and they disappear due to the saturation of the dimer, which leads to the MNP dominating the spectrum. The above effects, for which we provide physical explanations, allow one to tailor the Fano-like shape of the absorption spectrum, by changing either the detuning or the input power.
Hybrid molecular-plasmonic nanostructures have demonstrated their potential for surface enhanced spectroscopies, sensing or quantum control at the nanoscale. In this work, we investigate the strong coupling regime and explicitly describe the hybridiz
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