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Abstract
Bose-Einstein condensation of excitons, with its potential for frictionless energy transport, has recently been observed in materials at low temperatures. Here, we show that partial exciton condensation plays a significant role in the 18-chromophore B850 ring of the light-harvesting complex 2 (LH2) in purple bacteria. Even in the single-excitation regime, we observe that excitonic entanglement across multiple sites exhibits signatures of exciton condensation in the particle-hole reduced density matrix—a partial exciton condensate. Crucially, we find that, by distributing the exciton across multiple sites of the ring, the exciton-condensate-like state sets favorable conditions for enhanced energy transfer, both before and after decoherence. Surprisingly, this discovery reveals that excitonic condensation, previously thought to require extreme conditions, can occur in a partial form in biological systems under ambient conditions, providing new insight into energy transport. These results additionally bring new insight into the long-standing debate on quantum versus classical mechanisms in photosynthetic light harvesting by showing that quantum coherence, in the form of a partial exciton condensate, indirectly initializes subsequent classical transfer. Our findings not only deepen our understanding of quantum coherence in light harvesting but also suggest design principles for materials capable of leveraging excitonic entanglement for efficient energy transport.