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DOI: 10.1038/nphys4147
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Room-temperature superfluidity in a polariton condensate

Giovanni Lerario,Antonio Fieramosca,Fábio Barachati,Dario Ballarini,Konstantinos S. Daskalakis,Lorenzo Dominici,Milena De Giorgi,Stefan A. Maier,Giuseppe Gigli,Stéphane Kéna‐Cohen,D. Sanvitto

Superfluidity
Polariton
Physics
2017
Superfluidity is a phenomenon usually restricted to cryogenic temperatures, but organic microcavities provide the conditions for a superfluid flow of polaritons at room temperature. Superfluidity—the suppression of scattering in a quantum fluid at velocities below a critical value—is one of the most striking manifestations of the collective behaviour typical of Bose–Einstein condensates1. This phenomenon, akin to superconductivity in metals, has until now been observed only at prohibitively low cryogenic temperatures. For atoms, this limit is imposed by the small thermal de Broglie wavelength, which is inversely related to the particle mass. Even in the case of ultralight quasiparticles such as exciton-polaritons, superfluidity has been demonstrated only at liquid helium temperatures2. In this case, the limit is not imposed by the mass, but instead by the small binding energy of Wannier–Mott excitons, which sets the upper temperature limit. Here we demonstrate a transition from supersonic to superfluid flow in a polariton condensate under ambient conditions. This is achieved by using an organic microcavity supporting stable Frenkel exciton-polaritons at room temperature. This result paves the way not only for tabletop studies of quantum hydrodynamics, but also for room-temperature polariton devices that can be robustly protected from scattering.
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    Room-temperature superfluidity in a polariton condensate” is a paper by Giovanni Lerario Antonio Fieramosca Fábio Barachati Dario Ballarini Konstantinos S. Daskalakis Lorenzo Dominici Milena De Giorgi Stefan A. Maier Giuseppe Gigli Stéphane Kéna‐Cohen D. Sanvitto published in 2017. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.