The emergence of coherence among electronic quasiparticles underlies collective quantum phenomena from superconductivity to superradiance. In semiconductors, exciton coherence is generally thought to decay rapidly due to scattering and dephasing, limiting its persistence on ultrafast timescales. Here we demonstrate a light-field-driven mechanism that creates and stabilizes exciton coherence in the layered antiferromagnet CrSBr. We directly record the coherent optical field emitted by excitons and track in real time how a deterministic phase, imprinted by the excitation laser, drives incoherent excitons to synchronize into a collective state. This ensemble remains phase coherent for more than 2 ps, whereas its resonance energy undergoes an ultrafast modulation mediated by spin and lattice interactions. The time-resolved field evolution indicates that the multiple peaks seen in conventional spectra originate from a single excitonic resonance subject to dynamic energy modulation. Our findings establish optical phase imprinting as a mechanism to control and sustain collective order in semiconducting magnets, bridging light-driven dynamics with excitonic and magnetic correlations in layered quantum materials.
Yeung et al. (Fri,) studied this question.