172 research outputs found
A chip-scale integrated cavity-electro-optomechanics platform
We present an integrated optomechanical and electromechanical nanocavity, in
which a common mechanical degree of freedom is coupled to an ultrahigh-Q
photonic crystal defect cavity and an electrical circuit. The sys- tem allows
for wide-range, fast electrical tuning of the optical nanocavity resonances,
and for electrical control of optical radiation pressure back-action effects
such as mechanical amplification (phonon lasing), cooling, and stiffening.
These sort of integrated devices offer a new means to efficiently interconvert
weak microwave and optical signals, and are expected to pave the way for a new
class of micro-sensors utilizing optomechanical back-action for thermal noise
reduction and low-noise optical read-out.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Using dark modes for high-fidelity optomechanical quantum state transfer
In a recent publication [Y.D. Wang and A.A. Clerk, Phys. Rev. Lett. 108,
153603 (2012)], we demonstrated that one can use interference to significantly
increase the fidelity of state transfer between two electromagnetic cavities
coupled to a common mechanical resonator over a naive sequential-transfer
scheme based on two swap operations. This involved making use of a delocalized
electromagnetic mode which is decoupled from the mechanical resonator, a
so-called "mechanically-dark" mode. Here, we demonstrate the existence of a new
"hybrid" state transfer scheme which incorporates the best elements of the
dark-mode scheme (protection against mechanical dissipation) and the
double-swap scheme (fast operation time). Importantly, this new scheme also
does not require the mechanical resonator to be prepared initially in its
ground state. We also provide additional details on the previously-described
interference-enhanced transfer schemes, and provide an enhanced discussion of
how the interference physics here is intimately related to the optomechanical
analogue of electromagnetically-induced transparency (EIT). We also compare the
various transfer schemes over a wide range of relevant experimental parameters,
producing a "phase diagram" showing the the optimal transfer scheme for
different points in parameter space.Comment: 39 pages, 11 figures NJP 14 (Focus issue on Optomechanics
Optomechanical circuits for nanomechanical continuous variable quantum state processing
We propose and analyze a nanomechanical architecture where light is used to
perform linear quantum operations on a set of many vibrational modes. Suitable
amplitude modulation of a single laser beam is shown to generate squeezing,
entanglement, and state-transfer between modes that are selected according to
their mechanical oscillation frequency. Current optomechanical devices based on
photonic crystals may provide a platform for realizing this scheme.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Surface-plasmon mode hybridization in subwavelength microdisk lasers
Hybridization of surface-plasmon and dielectric waveguide whispering-gallery modes are demonstrated in a semiconductor microdisk laser cavity of subwavelength proportions. A metal layer is deposited on top of the semiconductor microdisk, the radius of which is systematically varied to enable mode hybridization between surface-plasmon and dielectric modes. The anticrossing behavior of the two cavity mode types is experimentally observed via photoluminescence spectroscopy and optically pumped lasing action at a wavelength of λ ~1.3 µm is achieved at room temperature
Continuous mode cooling and phonon routers for phononic quantum networks
We study the implementation of quantum state transfer protocols in phonon
networks, where in analogy to optical networks, quantum information is
transmitted through propagating phonons in extended mechanical resonator arrays
or phonon waveguides. We describe how the problem of a non-vanishing thermal
occupation of the phononic quantum channel can be overcome by implementing
optomechanical multi- and continuous mode cooling schemes to create a 'cold'
frequency window for transmitting quantum states. In addition, we discuss the
implementation of phonon circulators and switchable phonon routers, which rely
on strong coherent optomechanical interactions only, and do not require strong
magnetic fields or specific materials. Both techniques can be applied and
adapted to various physical implementations, where phonons coupled to spin or
charge based qubits are used for on-chip networking applications.Comment: 33 pages, 8 figures. Final version, a few minor changes and updated
reference
Cavity optomechanics with Si3N4 membranes at cryogenic temperatures
We describe a cryogenic cavity-optomechanical system that combines Si3N4
membranes with a mechanically-rigid Fabry-Perot cavity. The extremely high
quality-factor frequency products of the membranes allow us to cool a MHz
mechanical mode to a phonon occupation of less than 10, starting at a bath
temperature of 5 kelvin. We show that even at cold temperatures
thermally-occupied mechanical modes of the cavity elements can be a limitation,
and we discuss methods to reduce these effects sufficiently to achieve ground
state cooling. This promising new platform should have versatile uses for
hybrid devices and searches for radiation pressure shot noise.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, submitted to New Journal of Physic
Phonon number measurements using single photon opto-mechanics
We describe a system composed of two coupled optical cavity modes with a
coupling modulated by a bulk mechanical resonator. In addition, one of the
cavity modes is irreversibly coupled to a single photon source. Our scheme is
an opto-mechanical realisation of the Jaynes-Cummings model where the qubit is
a dual rail optical qubit while the bosonic degree of freedom is a matter
degree of freedom realised as the bulk mechanical excitation. We show the
possibility of engineering phonon number states of the mechanical oscillator in
such a system by computing the conditional state of the mechanics after
successive photon counting measurements
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