Abstract

Bosonic condensates of spinless noninteracting particles confined on a ring cannot propagate circular periodic currents once rotation symmetry of the system is broken. However, a persistent current may appear due to interparticle interactions exceeding some critical strength. In this up-critical regime breaking of the symmetry between the clockwise and anticlockwise rotations takes place. We consider this symmetry-breaking scenario in the case of a spinor condensate of exciton polaritons trapped on a ring split by a potential barrier. Due to the intrinsic symmetry of the effective spin-orbit interaction, which stems from the linear splitting between transverse-electric and transverse-magnetic microcavity modes, the potential barrier blocks the circulating current and imposes linear polarization patterns. On the other hand, circularly polarized polaritons form circular currents propagating in opposite directions with equal absolute values of angular momentum. In the presence of interparticle interactions, the symmetry of clockwise and anticlockwise currents can be broken spontaneously. We describe several symmetry-breaking scenarios, which imply either restoration of the global condensate rotation or the onset of the circular polarization in the symmetry-broken state.

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