21,712 research outputs found
Strong Optomechanical Squeezing of Light
We create squeezed light by exploiting the quantum nature of the mechanical
interaction between laser light and a membrane mechanical resonator embedded in
an optical cavity. The radiation pressure shot noise (fluctuating optical force
from quantum laser amplitude noise) induces resonator motion well above that of
thermally driven motion. This motion imprints a phase shift on the laser light,
hence correlating the amplitude and phase noise, a consequence of which is
optical squeezing. We experimentally demonstrate strong and continuous
optomechanical squeezing of 1.7 +/- 0.2 dB below the shot noise level. The peak
level of squeezing measured near the mechanical resonance is well described by
a model whose parameters are independently calibrated and that includes thermal
motion of the membrane with no other classical noise sources.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Ultraviolet atomic emission detector
A device and method are provided for performing qualitative and quantitative elemental analysis through the utilization of a vacuum UV chromatographic detector. The method involves the use of a carrier gas at low pressure. The gas carries a sample to a gas chromatograph column; the column output is directed to a microwave cavity. In this cavity, a low pressure microwave discharge produces fragmentation of the compounds present and generates intense atomic emissions in the vacuum ultraviolet. These emissions are isolated by a monochromator and measured by photometer to establish absolute concentration for the elements
An absorption spectrum amplifier for determining gas composition
Compositions of gas samples are frequently studied by laser absorption spectroscopy. Sensitivity is improved by two orders of magnitude when absorption cell is placed inside an organic-dye laser cavity
Improving broadband displacement detection with quantum correlations
Interferometers enable ultrasensitive measurement in a wide array of
applications from gravitational wave searches to force microscopes. The role of
quantum mechanics in the metrological limits of interferometers has a rich
history, and a large number of techniques to surpass conventional limits have
been proposed. In a typical measurement configuration, the tradeoff between the
probe's shot noise (imprecision) and its quantum backaction results in what is
known as the standard quantum limit (SQL). In this work we investigate how
quantum correlations accessed by modifying the readout of the interferometer
can access physics beyond the SQL and improve displacement sensitivity.
Specifically, we use an optical cavity to probe the motion of a silicon nitride
membrane off mechanical resonance, as one would do in a broadband displacement
or force measurement, and observe sensitivity better than the SQL dictates for
our quantum efficiency. Our measurement illustrates the core idea behind a
technique known as \textit{variational readout}, in which the optical readout
quadrature is changed as a function of frequency to improve broadband
displacement detection. And more generally our result is a salient example of
how correlations can aid sensing in the presence of backaction.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figure
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