Abstract
Thanks to their exceptional spatial, spectral and temporal resolution, highly-coherent free-electron beams have emerged as powerful probes for material excitations, enabling their characterization even in the quantum regime. Here, we investigate strong light–matter coupling through monochromatic and modulated electron wavepackets. In particular, we consider an archetypal target, comprising a nanophotonic cavity next to a single two-level emitter. We propose a model Hamiltonian describing the coherent interaction between the passing electron beam and the hybrid photonic–excitonic target, which is constructed using macroscopic quantum electrodynamics and fully parameterized in terms of the electromagnetic dyadic Green’s function. Using this framework, we first describe electron-energy-loss and cathodoluminescence spectroscopies, and photon-induced near-field electron emission microscopy. Finally, we show the power of modulated electrons beams as quantum tools for the manipulation of polaritonic targets presenting a complex energy landscape of excitations.
1 Introduction
Much research attention has focused lately on the strong-coupling (SC) phenomena that emerge when quantum emitters (QEs), such as organic molecules, solid-state vacancies, or quantum dots, are placed within the near-field of photonic resonators, such as Fabry–Perot cavities, metamaterial devices, or nanoantennas [1], [2], [3]. In setups involving macroscopic ensembles of QEs, the formation of polaritons (hybrid light–matter states) has opened the way for the manipulation of matter for purposes such as the modification of material properties or the control of chemical reactions [4], [5]. The high complexity of these systems, however, makes their theoretical description extremely challenging, which severely limits the capability of current theories to reproduce experimental results [3], [6]. Complementarily, polariton formation in systems comprising a single (or few) QEs [7], [8], [9] have been investigated for quantum light generation [10], [11] in studies that have also shed light into different aspects of light–matter SC at the macroscopic scale [12]. However, the inherent dark character of these microscopic systems [13], which must feature large light–matter interaction strengths and small radiative losses, prevents their full characterization by far-field, optical means.
Traditional electron-beam-based optical characterization methods [14], [15], such as electron-energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) or cathodoluminiscence (CL) microscopy, present extraordinary spatial and spectral resolutions, approaching the subnanometric and milielectronvolt ranges, respectively [16], [17]. These make them ideal for the exploration of light–matter SC and polaritonic states in nanophotonic samples involving only a few excitons [18], [19], [20], [21]. Moreover, in the last years, advances in ultrafast optical control of free-electron wavepackets reached the femtosecond scale, matching the optical period of visible light [22]. These are behind the emergence of techniques such as photon induced near-field electron microscopy (PINEM), that exploits the synchronous interaction between free-electrons and spatially-confined pulsed laser fields [23]. Developments in PINEM theory [24], [25] and, generally, in the description of electron–photon interactions [26], [27], [28], together with the extraordinary degree of optical modulation (in time and momentum space) of electron beams attainable today [29], [30], [31], have made possible their use to imprint, exchange and manipulate quantum coherence in optical and material excitations, sustained by micro- and nano-cavities [32], [33], [34], [35], [36], [37] and QEs [38], [39], [40], respectively. Only very recently, similar ideas have been proposed for hybdrid excitonic-photonic systems, where light–matter SC takes place. By means of phenomenological studies, it has been shown theoretically that electron–polariton interactions offer opportunities in areas such as sensing [41] and quantum information [42].
Here, we present a model Hamiltonian describing the quantum interaction between a modulated electron wavepacket and a polaritonic target comprising a single QE (treated as a two-level system) and a nanophotonic cavity. The Hamiltonian is constructed using the framework of macroscopic quantum electrodynamics (QED) [43], [44], [45], [46] and is fully parameterized in terms of the electromagnetic dyadic Green’s function. For simplicity, we consider a cavity with spherical symmetry, and to unveil clearly quantum-coherent effects in the light–matter SC, we restrict its Hilbert space to the lowest (degenerate), dipolar modes that it supports. We explore the polariton energy ladder of the hybrid photonic–excitonic system through both the free-electron wavepacket and photon spectra in EELS-, CL- and PINEM-like setups. Finally, we demonstrate the power of modulated electron beams to probe and control light–matter states in the SC regime.
2 Target-probe system and model Hamiltonian
The target-probe system that we have chosen to assess the ability of free electrons to explore light–matter SC is depicted in the top panel of Figure 1. We consider a nanophotonic cavity (typically a metal nanoparticle), sustaining a dipolar-like confined mode overlapping with the dipole moment, μ
QE = 1 e nm (parallel to x-axis), of a QE placed in close proximity of the nanoparticle surface (the QE-cavity distance is similar to the cavity radius itself, b
c−QE ≈ R), also along the x-direction. The free-electron wavepacket, with energies in the order of 10 keV, passes through the compound target along the

Top: sketch of the system under consideration: an electron wavepacket with central velocity
In Sections S1–4 of the Supplementary Material (SM), we provide details of the derivation of the system Hamiltonian and its parametrization using macroscopic QED. The small size of the cavity allows us to use the quasi-static approximation for the dyadic Green’s function employed in the electromagnetic description of the target and passing electrons. The impact of retardation and nonlocal effects, beyond the quasi-static picture, is also discussed in Section S4 of the SM. The system Hamiltonian can be written as
In Equations (1) and (2),
Note that the QE only couples with the cavity mode with an effective dipole moment along x-direction.
The two Holstein-like terms in Equation (2) describe the target-probe interaction, where
where ℏk
0 = m
e
v
0 ≫ ℏ|q| is the incoming momentum of the passing electrons, which is
We are interested in employing the electron beam as a tool to explore light–matter SC in the target. Therefore, we will proceed by diagonalizing (analytically) the bare Hamiltonian,
for the bare system, with
3 Electron-target interaction
We use the scattering matrix formalism [37], [38], [39] to describe the alteration of the target states by the passing electrons, which amounts to applying the propagator for the interaction Hamiltonian in the interaction picture
The Kronecker delta in Equation (9) accounts for energy conservation in the electron-target interaction. It is obtained by taking the discrete limit of the continuous delta function [38],
where we have used the notation δ i,j = δ(i, j) for clarity. Note that in previous works exploring the electron-beam-probing of optical cavities [34] and QEs [38], all the momentum and energy exchanged with the target was in multiples of ω c,QE/v 0 and ω c,QE, since the latter was the only energy scale present in the system. Here, the cavity-QE SC and the resulting polaritonic ladder gives rise to a much more complex landscape of electron-target interactions.
Figure 2 shows the adimensional matrix elements h
I,ϕ,ϕ′ that connect the ground state of the target,

Matrix elements, h
I,G,ϕ′, connecting the target ground state with states of the first excitation manifold as a function of the free electron-QE distance and the electron speed. (a) Upper polariton
Equation (11) illustrates the power of electron beams for the exploration of light–matter SC. In optical-based spectroscopic techniques, which operate under the far-field, laser-like pumping of the polaritonic target, the driving amplitude of the cavity is orders of magnitude larger than the QE. This is a consequence of the dipole mismatch between them, which is
Figure 2 render h I,G,1+ (a), h I,G,1− (b) and h I,G,1z (c), as a function of the electron-QE impact parameter, b e−QE, and the central velocity of the electron wavepacket normalized to the speed of light, v 0/c. We can observe that all the matrix elements decrease with larger distance and lower velocity (see dashed white lines), although only h I,G,1− completely vanishes within the parameter range considered, as indicated by the white solid line in panel (b). As expected from the setup we have chosen, see Figure 1, the electron probes more efficiently the polaritonic states than the z-dipolar cavity mode at small b e−QE. Only at large v 0/c, the three panels acquire similar absolute values, although the elements for the lower polariton change sign and become negative in this regime. The study provided in these three panels serves as a guide for the design the electron-beam configuration most appropriate to interrogate a given state of the first excitation manifold in the light–matter SC target.
The adimensional matrix elements in Figure 2 acquire values that range between −1 and 1, which means that the propagator in Equation (8) can be treated perturbatively in different orders of electron-target interaction for most of the configurations analyzed. Note that all the results that follow lie within this perturbative regime. Using the Taylor expansion for the exponent function, we can write
which shows explicitly the mixing of the states of
The quasi-analytical character of the approach introduced above provides us with deep insights into the phenomenology of target-probe interactions. In the following sections, we will use it to unveil how the electron-induced state mixing described by Equation (13) can be exploited for the probing of the polaritonic states in our model cavity-QE system. We will focus first on incoming electrons with a well-defined momentum, and then proceed to explore how modulated electron beams can be used to further characterize light–matter SC phenomena through the engineering of the electron wavefunction.
4 CL, EELS and PINEM in polaritonic targets
There are two strategies that allow extracting information from the target through the electron probing: through the radiation spectrum of the cavity (we neglect the emission from the QE) into the far-field, as it is done in CL setups, and through the energy lost/gained by the electron beam itself, like in EELS or PINEM experiments. We consider the former first, whose characterization is given by its power spectrum [49]
where
Figure 3(a) shows CL-like spectra obtained for aloof electrons with impact parameters b
e−QE = 1 nm, b
e−c
= 11 nm, and different velocities, indicated by the vertical color arrows in Figure 2. The far-field intensity spectra are broadened by σ, set to 0.02 eV, an optimistic estimation for plasmonic lifetimes [48] (1/σ = 30 fs). They are normalized to I
0, the intensity at the polariton maxima in the limit v
0 → 0 (see below). Three spectral maxima are apparent, which originate from the upper and lower polaritons, at 2.08 and 1.92 eV, respectively, and the uncoupled z − dipole cavity mode at 2 eV. For slow electrons (blue, v
0 = 0.02c), the spectrum is dominated by the polariton peaks, which have similar weights. This indicates that the electron-target interaction is mainly taking place through one of the polariton constituents. Indeed,

Far-field light intensity versus photon frequency for passing electrons with b e−QE = 1 nm and b e−c = 11 nm. (a) Power spectra for three different electron velocities, indicated by the vertical arrows in Figure 2: 0.02c (blue), 0.08c (orange) and 0.18c (green). (b) Height of the three maxima in I(ω) as a function of v 0/c. Vertical lines indicate the configurations considered in (a).
The spectrum for higher electron velocities, v
0 = 0.08c (orange), does not present the peak at 1.92 eV, which indicates that the lower polariton has become dark to the incoming electron beam. Note that
We investigate next the fingerprint of the target-probe interaction in the wavefunction of the passing electron beam. For this purpose, we focus on the reshaping of the momentum distribution of the electron wavepacket, measured by the difference in the population of the states
where the superscript 0 indicates that the expectation value is evaluated for the electron wavefunction prior to the interaction. Figure 4(a)–(c) plots this population difference versus

Momentum reshaping experienced by an incident monochromatic electron beam (k = k
0, v
0 = 0.02c) in its interaction with a polaritonic target as a function of the half cavity-QE detuning Δ = (ω
c
− ω
QE)/2. In panel (a), the cavity is initially in its ground state in an EELS-like configuration. In panels (b) and (c), the initial state of the cavity is given by Equation (16) with f = 0.1 and 0.5, respectively, mimicking a PINEM setup. Panel (d) shows far-field emission spectra for the targets in the three panels above and Δ = 0. Black solid (red dashed) lines plot the intensity after (before) the interaction with the incoming electrons. Thin grey lines render the different contributions to I(ω). They correspond to the transitions between the ground state and the
This eigenstate of
In Figure 4(a), we consider an EELS-like configuration, with the target initially in its ground state,
As shown in Figure 4(b), by pumping weakly the cavity mode (f = 0.1), and under a monochromatic electron beam with k = k
0 and v
0 = 0.02c, a region of Δn
k
> 0 emerges in the energy-gain side of the momentum transfer map. This indicates that, as a result of the interaction with the target, the electron wavepacket can acquire momentum components larger than k
0 thanks to the population in the first excitation manifold of the cavity. This setup mimics a PINEM experiment, in which the passing electrons exchanges energy with an optically-driven resonator. We can observe that the anticrossing profile in the energy-gain region is the fainted mirror image of the energy-loss one, with asymptotic branches given by fixed ω
c
and −Δ. At higher driving, f = 0.5 in Figure 4(c), the magnitude of the energy gain anti-crossing becomes comparable to its energy loss counterpart, as the amplitude of
To complement our study, we plot in Figure 4(d) the emission spectrum calculated from Equation (14) under the driving conditions in panels (a)–(c) and for zero cavity-QE detuning (Δ = 0). Red dashed and black solid lines render I(ω) (in log scale) before and after the interaction with the electron beam. At f = 0 (EELS-CL configuration), I(ω) = 0 prior to the electron arrival, and the final spectrum is dominated by two maxima originated from the radiative decay of the
Figure 4(d) also presents intensity spectra for the two optically-driven cavities in panels (b) and (c), evaluated at f = 0.1 and 0.5, respectively. In both cases, the initial spectra present the two main polaritonic peaks only, whose height increases with f. In the final I(ω), multiple contributions can be identified. Apart from the two main ones, whose amplitude barely varies with respect to f = 0, and the central z − dipole feature which is independent of f, we can observe that the weight of the
5 Modulated electron beams
In the previous section, we have shown that, in a PINEM setup, electron wavefunctions with a rich momentum distribution can be generated from monochromatic electron beams through their interaction with a pumped cavity-QE target. By letting the electrons drift after the interaction, the various momentum components separate in space, giving rise to a series of peaked electron wavepackets. These are usually termed as modulated electron beams. Indeed, in recent years, much research attention have focused on different approaches to generate modulated electron wavefunctions through then interaction with optical systems [52], [53], [54]. Here, we explore the probing capabilities that these modulated electrons bring when interacting with a cavity-QE system, and show that quantum degrees of freedom associated to the electron wavefunction become particularly relevant in the exploration of polaritonic states.
In this section, we will use the same formalism as in the previous one, but for convenience, we will explicitly deal with target and probe degrees of freedom separately. As a starting point, the bare Hamiltonian eigenstates in Equation (7) as
with
We consider now a modulated electron beam, initially prepared in a superposition of momenta of the form
The expression above shows that the population of the target states are completely independent from the electron momentum distribution [37], as
Next, we focus our attention on targets prepared in a superposition of polaritonic states of the form
which explicitly shows that for arbitrary initial target state, the final polaritonic populations can vary thanks to the coherences in
To illustrate the implications of Equation (19), we consider a particular target-probe configuration. The initial electron wavefunction is set to a comb of the form
where θ is a real number. Note that this wavefunction can be expressed as a linear combination of the target ground state and the
In Figure 5(a) and (b), we analyze the population differences (given by the diagonal terms of

Impact of the electron modulation on the target population transfer (a)–(b) and cavity power spectrum (c)–(d). In the top (bottom) panels, the momentum modulation is at resonance with the transition between the ground state and upper (lower) polariton state, q mod = ω 1,+/v 0 (q mod = ω 1,−/v 0). Three different electron central velocities are considered: 0.02c (blue), 0.08c (orange) and 0.2c (green), and the impact parameter b e−c is set to 11 nm. In all panels, two different initial state phases, θ are considered: π/2 (dashed lines) and −π/2 (dotted lines). The solid lines correspond to a non-modulated (N.M.) electron beam, and the solid black lines in (c) and (d) plot the cavity spectrum before the interaction with the passing electrons.
As expected, Figure 5(a) displays a significant population transfer only between the ground state (left) and the upper polariton (right), which is larger for lower electron velocity, following the monotonic dependence in the emitter-target coupling in Figure 2(a). Moreover, we can observe that for θ = −π/2 the upper polariton gains population (as in the non-modulated case), while it gets depopulated for θ = π/2. Note that this parameter sets the phase, and therefore the sign, of the contribution of the initial coherences to the final populations given by the last term in Equation (19). We can see how this can be leveraged to control the flow of population among polaritonic states. The momentum spacing in B(k) is set to yield the most efficient energy transfer between the ground and lower polariton states in Figure 5(b). The non-monotonic dependence of the populations on the electron velocity in this case is inherited from Figure 2(b). Again, varying θ inverts the direction of the population transfer.
Apart from analyzing the effect of electron modulation on the target populations, we also investigate its impact on the cavity power spectrum given by Equation (14), now evaluated for the state that results from applying the scattering matrix on Equation (20). Importantly, this is a far-field magnitude that can be easily accessed experimentally. Figure 5(c) and (d) plot I(ω) for q mod = ω 1,+/v 0, and q mod = ω 1,−/v 0, respectively. The black solid line renders the cavity spectrum before the interaction with the electron beam, I init. We can observe that only the upper polariton peak is shaped by the passing electrons in (c), and the lower polariton one in (d). This illustrates the far-field fingerprint of the population manipulation in panels (a) and (b). In both cases, only the emission from the targeted transition through q mod is modified, keeping the spectrum around the other features unaltered. Importantly, as we observed in the polariton populations, the initial coherences, whose contribution to the spectrum depends on θ, set whether the altered emission peak increases or decreases with respect to I init.
Figure 5 indicates that the coherences, rather than the populations, in
Finally, we pay attention to the effect that the target-probe interaction has on the modulated electron beam. The fact that the population transferences induced by modulated beams are larger than the non-modulated ones means that the energy balance of the interaction can be altered through the modulation itself. Thus, it is possible, in principle, to pump or deplete the target. In Figure 6, we explore the net energy change experienced by the passing electrons
where Δn k is defined in Equation (15). As the initial electron wavefunction, we take the finite comb in Figure 5 and the target is prepared in the state given by Equation (20).

Expectation value of the energy change of the electron in units ℏω c . Main panels show the case of modulated electrons, showcasing that net energy gain and loss is achievable by modulating the electron. On each panel we show the modulation spacing and also the phase factor of the initial target state. The inset corresponds to the case of a non-modulated electron, where there always is net energy loss. The result in this case is independent of the phase factor.
The four panels in Figure 6 display ΔE in units of ℏω c as a function of the central electron velocity and impact parameter, b e−QE. The results for the initial target state with θ = −π/2 (θ = π/2) are shown in the left (right) maps, and the modulation is set at resonance with the ground transition to the upper (top) and lower (bottom) polariton. For reference, the map for non-modulated electrons is shown as an inset with the same parameter range, illustrating that the passing electrons can only lose energy in the non-modulated setup, and ΔE is larger for smaller impact parameter and electron velocity. The situation is rather similar for θ = −π/2. For this state phase, there emerges only a narrow region of small v 0/c where the electron beam gains energy for q mod = ω 1,−/v 0. Apart from it, the maps resemble the EELS one, and the target populations always increases by the effect of the passing electrons. For θ = π/2 (right), the net energy change maps are very different. Fast electron beams gain energy for both q mod (although ΔE is larger for the transition between the ground and upper polariton), and lose it at low velocities and impact parameters. Here, the target is populated/depopulated depending on v 0 and b e−QE. The richness of the net energy loss/gain landscape in Figure 6 follows from the coupling strengths in Figure 2, as the leading order in the electron-target interaction is linear in h I . Thus, we can link the gain-loss transitions in the lower maps with the change in sign in h I,G,1− in Figure 2(b). All maps are equivalent in the limit of small v 0 and b e−QE, as h I → 1 in this limit and the electron modulation becomes irrelevant. Our results also showcase the power of polaritonic systems to re-shape and alter modulated electron beams through the energy of its natural transitions and the phase involved in its initial state preparation.
6 Conclusions
We have presented a comprehensive study of the probing of polaritonic systems by electron beams. The target is composed by a nanophotonic cavity supporting two dipolar modes, and a quantum emitter strongly coupled to one of them. Using macroscopic QED, we have built a model Hamiltonian describing the interaction between probe and target, fully parameterized in terms of the dyadic Green’s function in the quasi-static approximation. We have analyzed the effect of electron–polariton interactions on different observables, including the electron momentum distribution and net energy change, and the polaritonic state populations and the light emission spectrum by the target. Our investigation has proceeded by increasing the complexity on the electron beam and target preparation, from EELS and CL to PINEM, and finally PINEM with modulated electron beams. All these described using the same, unifying theoretical model. Our results show that free electrons, through the modulation of their wavefunction, are a powerful probe, and also a suitable tool for the manipulation, of quantum targets with a complex energy ladder of (bright and dark) excitations, such as polaritonic systems.
Funding source: Comunidad de Madrid
Award Identifier / Grant number: Y2020/TCS-6545 (NanoQuCo-CM)
Funding source: Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación
Award Identifier / Grant number: PID2021-126964OB-I00
Award Identifier / Grant number: TED2021-130552B-C21
Funding source: HORIZON EUROPE Digital, Industry and Space
Award Identifier / Grant number: 101070700 (MIRAQLS)
Acknowledgments
The authors thank Francisco J. García-Vidal for fruitful discussions.
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Research funding: The authors acknowledge funding from the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities through Grants Nos. PID2021-126964OB-I00 and TED2021-130552B-C21, as well as the European Union’s Horizon Programme through grant 101070700 (MIRAQLS) and the Proyecto Sinérgico CAM 2020 Y2020/TCS-6545 (NanoQuCo-CM).
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Author contributions: All authors have accepted responsibility for the entire content of this manuscript and approved its submission.
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Conflict of interest: Authors state no conflicts of interest.
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Informed consent: Informed consent was obtained from all individuals included in this study.
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Ethical approval: The conducted research is not related to either human or animals use.
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Data availability: The datasets used for the figures were generated using the theoretical derivations in the main text and can be fully reproduced using the details provided in the main text and supplementary material. Despite this, the authors will be pleased to provide the actual dataset corresponding to all the figures upon request.
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Supplementary Material
This article contains supplementary material (https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2023-0907).
© 2024 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- Nanophotonics out of equilibrium
- Perspectives
- The future of quantum technologies: superfluorescence from solution-processed, tunable materials
- Toward “super-scintillation” with nanomaterials and nanophotonics
- Spatiotemporal imaging and manipulation of surface plasmons
- Research Articles
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- Hot electron enhanced photoemission from laser fabricated plasmonic photocathodes
- Enhanced inverse Faraday effect and time-dependent thermo-transmission in gold nanodisks
- Resonant third-harmonic generation driven by out-of-equilibrium electron dynamics in sodium-based near-zero index thin films
- Electron-assisted probing of polaritonic light–matter states
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