13 research outputs found

    Normal-mode splitting in the optomechanical system with an optical parametric amplifier and coherent feedback

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    Strong coupling in optomechanical systems is the basic condition for observing many quantum phenomena such as optomechanical squeezing and entanglement. Normal-mode splitting (NMS) is the most evident signature of strong coupling systems. Here we show the NMS in the spectra of the movable mirror and the output field in an optomechanical system can be flexibly engineered by a combination of optical parametric amplifier (OPA) and coherent feedback (CF). Moreover, the NMS could be enhanced by optimizing the parameters such as input optical power, OPA gain and phase, CF strength in terms of amplitude reflectivity of beam splitter.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure

    Precision Enhancement in Spatial Measurement by Introducing Squeezed Light into Weak Value Amplification

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    The precision enhancement is demonstrated in an optical spatial measurement based on weak value amplification (WVA) system and split-like detection, by injecting a TEM10 squeezed vacuum beam. It is the first time combining the WVA technique and squeezed beam injection to experimentally realize high-precision optical spatial measurement beyond the standard quantum limit. As a result, the precision enhancement of 1.3 times can be achieved at 500kHz by adding a squeezed beam in the vacuum input port of the Mach-Zehnder interferometer. The minimum measurable displacement is reduced from 1.08pm to 0.85pm and the corresponding minimum measurable tilt is reduced from 0.86prad to 0.67prad. Moreover, the spatial measurement at low-frequency band is also implemented and the SNR is improved 2dB at 4kHz. Our work provides an effective method to accomplish higher precision in optical spatial measurement, which has potential applications in gravitational wave interferometer calibration, super-resolution quantum imaging, etc.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures

    (H, Li)Cl and LiOH hydration : surface tension, solution conductivity and viscosity, and exothermic dynamics

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    We systematically examined the effect of (H, Li)Cl and LiOH solvation on the O:H[sbnd]O bond network deformation, surface tension (contact angle), solution electrical conductivity, thermomics, and viscosity evolution aiming to clarifying the functionalities for ions, lone pairs, and protons acting in these solutions. Results confirmed that H + and electron lone pair ā€˜:ā€™ introduction turns out the (H 3 O + , OH āˆ’ )Ā·4H 2 O motifs and that the Li + and Cl āˆ’ form each a hydration volume through the screened electrostatic polarization. The (H 3 O + , OH āˆ’ )Ā·4H 2 O turns an O:H[sbnd]O bond into the H ā†” H antiā€“HB that disrupts the HCl solution network and its surface tension and into the O:ā‡”:O superā€“HB compressor that raises the LiOH solution surface tension and viscosity, as well as the solution temperature during solvation. The Li + /Cl āˆ’ ion reserves/reduces its hydration volume because of the complete/incomplete screen shielding by the ordered hydrating H 2 O dipoles and the Cl āˆ’ ā†” Cl āˆ’ repulsion at higher concentrations. The invariant/variant Li + /Cl āˆ’ hydration volume dictates, respectively, the linear/nonlinear concentration dependence of the Jonesā€“Dole viscosity. Except for the HCl/H 2 O surface tension and LiOH/H 2 O viscosity, the conductivity, surface tension, and viscosity of these solutions follow the Jonesā€“Dole notion that underscores the faction of bond transition from the mode of water to hydration.Accepted versio

    Discriminative ionic capabilities on hydrogen-bond transition from the mode of ordinary water to (Mg, Ca, Sr)(Cl, Br)ā‚‚ hydration

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    It has been a long pursuit to discriminate the ionic roles of mono- and di-valent salt solutions in modulating the hydrogen bonding network and solution properties. We attended this issue by examining the effect of concentrated YX 2 (Y[dbnd]Mg, Ca, Sr; X[dbnd]Cl, Br) solvation on O:Hā€“O bonds transition from the mode of ordinary water to hydration in terms of the number fraction f YX2 (C) and the segmental O:Hā€“O bond phonon stiffness shift Ī”Ļ‰(C) with C being the solute concentration. The invariant df Y (C) / dC at C ā‰¤ <0.05 suggests that the small Y 2+ forms a constantly-sized hydration droplet with weak responding to interference of other ions because its hydrating H 2 O dipoles screen mostly its electric field. However, the number inadequacy of the highly-ordered hydrating H 2 O dipoles partially screens the large X āˆ’ . The X āˆ’ ā†” X āˆ’ electrostatic repulsion weakens its electric field. The concentration-trend consistency of the f YX2 (C), the solution conductivity Ļƒ YX2 (C), and surface stress (contact angle) Īø YX2 (C) for YX 2 solutions clarifies their common origin of ionic polarization. However, the Jonesā€“Dale notion disobedience of the viscosity Ī· YX2 (C) suggests the dominance of the inter-ion repulsion.Submitted/Accepted versionFinancial support received from Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos. 11872052(YL); 21875024(CQ)), and the Science Challenge Project (No. TZ2016001) of China are acknowledged
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