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Abstract Defects in atomically thin semiconductors and their moiré heterostructures have emerged as a unique testbed for quantum science. Strong light–matter coupling, large spin–orbit interaction and enhanced Coulomb correlations facilitate a spin–photon interface for future qubit operations and efficient single-photon quantum emitters. Yet, directly observing the relevant interplay of the electronic structure of a single defect with other microscopic elementary excitations on their intrinsic length, time and energy scales remained a long-held dream. Here we directly resolve in space, time and energy how a spin–orbit-split energy level of an isolated selenium vacancy in a moiré-distorted WSe 2 monolayer evolves under the controlled excitation of lattice vibrations, using lightwave scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy. By locally launching a phonon oscillation and taking ultrafast energy-resolved snapshots of the vacancy’s states faster than the vibration period, we directly measure the impact of electron–phonon coupling in an isolated single-atom defect. The combination of atomic spatial, sub-picosecond temporal and millielectronvolt energy resolution marks a disruptive development towards a comprehensive understanding of complex quantum materials, where the key microscopic elementary interactions can now be disentangled, one by one.
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Carmen Roelcke
University of Regensburg
Lukas Z. Kastner
University of Regensburg
Maximilian Graml
Instituto de Física Teórica
Nature Photonics
University of Regensburg
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Roelcke et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e73fdcb6db6435876b971e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41566-024-01390-6