Abstract

Impressive progress has been achieved in controlling the spontaneous emission rate for emitters in Nanophotonic structures, such as microcavities, photonic crystals and nano-antennas. In all cases, however, the modification of the emission is stationary in time. Thus, the emission rate is time-independent and the distribution of photon emission times are stochastic and follow an exponential distribution in the weak coupling regime. In this paper, by using fast all-optical switching of a microcavity, the cavity resonance is tuned within tens of picosesonds. This drastically changes the local optical density of states at the emission frequency within the emission lifetime of the emitters. This paper theoretically studied an ensemble of two-level sources with a time dependent decay rate and have derived the excited state population and emitted intensity as a function of time for continuous wave and pulsed excitation. Deterministic bursts of dramatically enhanced or inhibited emission intensity within short intervals. Thereby, we control the photon distribution to show behavior that strongly deviates from single exponential decay. This can be used to protect quantum information systems against decoherence and to realize non-Markovian dynamics in cavity quantum electrodynamics.

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