36 research outputs found
Beating quantum limits in optomechanical sensor by cavity detuning
We study the quantum limits in an optomechanical sensor based on a detuned
high-finesse cavity with a movable mirror. We show that the radiation pressure
exerted on the mirror by the light in the detuned cavity induces a modification
of the mirror dynamics and makes the mirror motion sensitive to the signal.
This leads to an amplification of the signal by the mirror dynamics, and to an
improvement of the sensor sensitivity beyond the standard quantum limit, up to
an ultimate quantum limit only related to the mechanical dissipation of the
mirror. This improvement is somewhat similar to the one predicted in detuned
signal-recycled gravitational-waves interferometers, and makes a high-finesse
cavity a model system to test these quantum effect
Resolved-sideband cooling and measurement of a micromechanical oscillator close to the quantum limit
The observation of quantum phenomena in macroscopic mechanical oscillators
has been a subject of interest since the inception of quantum mechanics.
Prerequisite to this regime are both preparation of the mechanical oscillator
at low phonon occupancy and a measurement sensitivity at the scale of the
spread of the oscillator's ground state wavefunction. It has been widely
perceived that the most promising approach to address these two challenges are
electro nanomechanical systems. Here we approach for the first time the quantum
regime with a mechanical oscillator of mesoscopic dimensions--discernible to
the bare eye--and 1000-times more massive than the heaviest nano-mechanical
oscillators used to date. Imperative to these advances are two key principles
of cavity optomechanics: Optical interferometric measurement of mechanical
displacement at the attometer level, and the ability to use measurement induced
dynamic back-action to achieve resolved sideband laser cooling of the
mechanical degree of freedom. Using only modest cryogenic pre-cooling to 1.65
K, preparation of a mechanical oscillator close to its quantum ground state
(63+-20 phonons) is demonstrated. Simultaneously, a readout sensitivity that is
within a factor of 5.5+-1.5 of the standard quantum limit is achieved. The
reported experiments mark a paradigm shift in the approach to the quantum limit
of mechanical oscillators using optical techniques and represent a first step
into a new era of experimental investigation which probes the quantum nature of
the most tangible harmonic oscillator: a mechanical vibration.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Synchronizing the dynamics of a single NV spin qubit on a parametrically coupled radio-frequency field through microwave dressing
A hybrid spin-oscillator system in parametric interaction is experimentally
emulated using a single NV spin qubit immersed in a radio frequency (RF) field
and probed with a quasi resonant microwave (MW) field. We report on the MW
mediated locking of the NV spin dynamics onto the RF field, appearing when the
MW driven Rabi precession frequency approaches the RF frequency and for
sufficiently large RF amplitudes. These signatures are analog to a phononic
Mollow triplet in the MW rotating frame for the parametric interaction and
promise to have impact in spin-dependent force detection strategies
Observation of a phononic Mollow triplet in a hybrid spin-nanomechanical system
Reminiscent of the bound character of a qubit's dynamics confined on the
Bloch sphere, the observation of a Mollow triplet in the resonantly driven
qubit fluorescence spectrum represents one of the founding signatures of
Quantum Electrodynamics. Here we report on its observation in a hybrid
spin-nanomechanical system, where a Nitro-gen Vacancy spin qubit is
magnetically coupled to the vibrations of a Silicon Carbide nanowire. A
resonant microwave field turns the originally parametric hybrid interac-tion
into a resonant process, where acoustic phonons are now able to induce
transitions between the dressed qubit states, leading to synchronized
spin-oscillator dynamics. We further explore the vectorial character of the
hybrid coupling to the bidimensional de-formations of the nanowire. The
demonstrated microwave assisted synchronization of the spin-oscillator dynamics
opens novel perspectives for the exploration of spin-dependent forces, the
key-ingredient for quantum state transfer
Optomechanical sideband cooling of a micromechanical oscillator close to the quantum ground state
Cooling a mesoscopic mechanical oscillator to its quantum ground state is
elementary for the preparation and control of low entropy quantum states of
large scale objects. Here, we pre-cool a 70-MHz micromechanical silica
oscillator to an occupancy below 200 quanta by thermalizing it with a 600-mK
cold 3He gas. Two-level system induced damping via structural defect states is
shown to be strongly reduced, and simultaneously serves as novel thermometry
method to independently quantify excess heating due to the cooling laser. We
demonstrate that dynamical backaction sideband cooling can reduce the average
occupancy to 9+-1 quanta, implying that the mechanical oscillator can be found
(10+- 1)% of the time in its quantum ground state.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Deviation from the normal mode expansion in a coupled graphene-nanomechanical system
We optomechanically measure the vibrations of a nanomechanical system made of
a graphene membrane suspended on a silicon nitride nanoresonator. When probing
the thermal noise of the coupled nanomechanical device, we observe a
significant deviation from the normal mode expansion. It originates from the
heterogeneous character of mechanical dissipation over the spatial extension of
coupled eigenmodes, which violates one of the fundamental prerequisite for
employing this commonly used description of the nanoresonators' thermal noise.
We subsequently measure the local mechanical susceptibility and demonstrate
that the fluctuation-dissipation theorem still holds and permits a proper
evaluation of the thermal noise of the nanomechanical system. Since it
naturally becomes delicate to ensure a good spatial homogeneity at the
nanoscale, this approach is fundamental to correctly describe the thermal noise
of nanomechanical systems which ultimately impact their sensing capacity
Nano-optomechanical measurement in the photon counting regime
Optically measuring in the photon counting regime is a recurrent challenge in
modern physics and a guarantee to develop weakly invasive probes. Here we
investigate this idea on a hybrid nano-optomechanical system composed of a
nanowire hybridized to a single Nitrogen-Vacancy (NV) defect. The vibrations of
the nanoresonator grant a spatial degree of freedom to the quantum emitter and
the photon emission event can now vary in space and time. We investigate how
the nanomotion is encoded on the detected photon statistics and explore their
spatio-temporal correlation properties. This allows a quantitative measurement
of the vibrations of the nanomechanical oscillator at unprecedentedly low light
intensities in the photon counting regime when less than one photon is detected
per oscillation period, where standard detectors are dark-noise-limited. These
results have implications for probing weakly interacting nanoresonators, for
low temperature experiments and for investigating single moving markers
A single NV defect coupled to a nanomechanical oscillator
A single Nitrogen Vacancy (NV) center hosted in a diamond nanocrystal is
positioned at the extremity of a SiC nanowire. This novel hybrid system couples
the degrees of freedom of two radically different systems, i.e. a
nanomechanical oscillator and a single quantum object. The dynamics of the
nano-resonator is probed through time resolved nanocrystal fluorescence and
photon correlation measurements, conveying the influence of a mechanical degree
of freedom given to a non-classical photon emitter. Moreover, by immersing the
system in a strong magnetic field gradient, we induce a magnetic coupling
between the nanomechanical oscillator and the NV electronic spin, providing
nanomotion readout through a single electronic spin. Spin-dependent forces
inherent to this coupling scheme are essential in a variety of active cooling
and entanglement protocols used in atomic physics, and should now be within the
reach of nanomechanical hybrid systems
Cavity nano-optomechanics in the ultrastrong coupling regime with ultrasensitive force sensors
In a canonical optomechanical system, mechanical vibrations are dynamically encoded on an optical probe field which reciprocally exerts a backaction force. Due to the weak single photon coupling strength achieved with macroscopic oscillators, most of existing experiments were conducted with large photon numbers to achieve sizeable effects, thereby causing a dilution of the original optomechanical non-linearity. Here, we investigate the optomechanical interaction of an ultrasensi-tive suspended nanowire inserted in a fiber-based microcavity mode. This implementation allows to enter far into the hitherto unexplored ultrastrong optomechanical coupling regime, where one single intracavity photon can displace the oscillator by more than its zero point fluctuations. To fully characterize our system, we implement nanowire-based scanning probe measurements to map the vectorial optomechanical coupling strength, but also to reveal the intracavity optomechanical force field experienced by the nanowire. This work establishes that the single photon cavity optomechanics regime is within experimental reach. Introduction-The field of optomechanics has gone through many impressive developments over the last decades [1]. The coupling between a probe light field and a mechanical degree of freedom, an oscillator, possibly assisted by a high finesse cavity was early proposed as an ideal platform to explore the quantum limits of ultrasen-sitive measurements, where the quantum fluctuations of the light are the dominant source of measurement noise [2-5]. The measurement backaction was also employed to manipulate the oscillator state through optical forces and dynamical backaction, leading to optomechanical correlations between both components of the system. In this framework, ground state cooling, mechanical detection of radiation pressure quantum noise, advanced correlation between light and mechanical states or optomechanical squeezing were reported [6-19]. All those impressive results were obtained in the linear regime of cavity optomechanics, making use of large photon numbers, where the interaction Hamiltonian is linearized around an operating setpoint. However, the optomechanical interaction possesses an intrinsic non-linearity at the single excitation level, which has for the moment remained far from experimental reach due to the weak single photon coupling strength achieved with macroscopic oscillators. This regime is achieved when a single photon in the cavity shifts the static rest position of the mechanical resonator by a quantity δx (1) which is larger than its zero point fluctuations δx zpf. A very strong optomechanical interaction is indeed needed to fulfil this condition since it requires g 0 /Ω m > 1 where g 0 is the single photon optomechanical coupling and Ω m the resonant pulsation of the mechanical oscillator. Operating in the ultra-strong coupling regime is thus an experimenta