Room-temperature quantum optomechanics using an ultra-low noise cavity
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2309.15051v1
- Date: Tue, 26 Sep 2023 16:27:32 GMT
- Title: Room-temperature quantum optomechanics using an ultra-low noise cavity
- Authors: Guanhao Huang, Alberto Beccari, Nils J. Engelsen, Tobias J. Kippenberg
- Abstract summary: We demonstrate optomechanical squeezing at room temperature in a phononic-engineered membrane-in-the-middle system.
By using a high finesse cavity whose mirrors are patterned with phononic crystal structures, we reduce cavity frequency noise by more than 700-fold.
These advances enable operation within a factor of 2.5 of the Heisenberg limit, leading to squeezing of the probing field by 1.09 dB below the vacuum fluctuations.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Ponderomotive squeezing of light, where a mechanical oscillator creates
quantum correlations between the phase and amplitude of the interacting light
field, is a canonical signature of the quantum regime of optomechanics. At room
temperature, this has only been reached in pioneering experiments where an
optical restoring force controls the oscillator stiffness, akin to the
vibrational motion of atoms in an optical lattice. These include both levitated
nanoparticles and optically-trapped cantilevers. Recent advances in engineered
mechanical resonators, where the restoring force is provided by material
rigidity rather than an external optical potential, have realized ultra-high
quality factors (Q) by exploiting `soft clamping'. However entering the quantum
regime with such resonators, has so far been prevented by optical cavity
frequency fluctuations and thermal intermodulation noise. Here, we overcome
this challenge and demonstrate optomechanical squeezing at room temperature in
a phononic-engineered membrane-in-the-middle system. By using a high finesse
cavity whose mirrors are patterned with phononic crystal structures, we reduce
cavity frequency noise by more than 700-fold. In this ultra-low noise cavity,
we introduce a silicon nitride membrane oscillator whose density is modulated
by silicon nano-pillars, yielding both high thermal conductance and a localized
mechanical mode with Q of 1.8e8. These advances enable operation within a
factor of 2.5 of the Heisenberg limit, leading to squeezing of the probing
field by 1.09 dB below the vacuum fluctuations. Moreover, the long thermal
decoherence time of the membrane oscillator (more than 30 vibrational periods)
allows us to obtain conditional displaced thermal states of motion with an
occupation of 0.97 phonon, using a multimode Kalman filter. Our work extends
quantum control of engineered macroscopic oscillators to room temperature.
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