We show that when a monopolar current is passed through an n-i-n structure, superlinear photocurrent response occurs when there is a polariton condensate. This is in sharp contrast to the previously observed behavior for a standard semiconductor laser. Theoretical modeling shows that this is due to a stimulated exciton-exciton scattering process in which one exciton relaxes into the condensate, while another one dissociates into an electron-hole pair.Polariton condensation is now a well established effect [1][2][3]. The polaritons, which can be viewed as dressed photons with effective mass and repulsive interactions, undergo Bose-Einstein condensation and show many of the effects of bosonic stimulation and superfluidity [4,5], including rapidly flowing to the ground state of whatever potential profile they occupy [6]. Polariton condensates can range from strongly nonequilibrium all the way to equilibrium [7,8]. Many previous experiments have focused either on purely optical behavior, in which an optical pump produces optical emission from a polariton condensate; a small number have studied the production of a polariton condensate using electrical injection of free carriers in p-i-n structures [9][10][11]. In this paper, we show a unique effect of a polariton condensate acting the other way, in which the condensate strongly affects an electrical current. We show that the macroscopic coherence of the polariton wave function dramatically affects the electrical transport, even though the electrical current itself is incoherent. arXiv:1710.10920v3 [cond-mat.quant-gas] 18 Jun 2018 2 I. EXPERIMENTAL METHOD Figure 1(a) shows the structure of the samples used in our experiments. The central, activeregion consists of a pillar, typically 100 µm × 100 µm, which has two distributed-Bragg-reflector (DBR) mirrors, making up an optical cavity. Photons in the microcavity interact with excitons in the quantum wells placed at the antinodes of an optical mode. This part of the structure is the same as that used in previous experiments [6,7,[12][13][14] which showed long lifetime ( > ∼ 200 ps) and longdistance transport of polaritons (hundreds of microns to millimeters). Our pillar structure is similar to those studied by other groups [15,16], but the long lifetime of the polaritons in our structure allows the polaritons to move across the pillar and find the global potential-energy minima. As reported in Ref.[6] and shown here, in our structures the strain at the edges of the pillar leads to energy minima for the polaritons along the sides which trap the polariton condensate. Figure 1(c) shows a typical intrinsic energy profile for the polaritons, and Figure 1(d) shows the formation of the condensate in these edge traps when the laser light is focused tightly at the center of the pillar, about 40 µm from where the condensate forms at the edges. As discussed in Ref.[6], disconnected condensates initially form at the corners of the pillar and then lock to a monoenergetic condensate extending across the pillar as the polariton density ...