%0 Journal Article %T A charged quantum dot micropillar system for deterministic light matter interactions %A Petros Androvitsaneas %A Andrew B. Young %A Chritian Schneider %A Sebastian Maier %A Martin Kamp %A Sven H£¿fling %A Sebastian Knauer %A Edmund Harbord %A Cheng-Yong Hu %A John G. Rarity %A Ruth Oulton %J Physics %D 2015 %I arXiv %X Quantum dots (QDs) are semiconductor nanostructures in which a three dimensional potential trap produces an electronic quantum confinement, thus mimicking the behaviour of single atomic dipole-like transitions. However unlike atoms, QDs can be incorporated into solid state photonic devices such as cavities or waveguides that enhance the light-matter interaction. A near unit efficiency light-matter interaction is essential for deterministic, scalable quantum information (QI) devices. In this limit, a single photon input into the device will undergo a large rotation of the polarization of the light field due to the strong interaction with the QD. In this paper we measure a macroscopic ($\sim6^o$) phase shift of light as a result of the interaction with a negatively charged QD coupled to a low quality-factor (Q$\sim290$) pillar microcavity. This unexpectedly large rotation angle demonstrates this simple low Q-factor design would enable near deterministic light-matter interactions. %U http://arxiv.org/abs/1511.08776v1