Strong dispersive coupling of a high finesse cavity to a micromechanical membrane
J. D. Thompson, B. M. Zwickl, A. M. Jayich, Florian Marquardt, S. M., Girvin, and J. G. E. Harris

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a novel optomechanical system with strong dispersive coupling between a high finesse cavity and a micromechanical membrane, enabling quantum state measurements and advancing quantum control of macroscopic objects.
Contribution
The authors introduce a new cavity design with a dielectric membrane that separates optical and mechanical components, facilitating quantum measurements of mechanical energy states.
Findings
Achieved strong dispersive coupling in a high finesse cavity with a dielectric membrane.
Enabled direct measurement of the square of the membrane's displacement.
Estimated feasibility of observing quantum jumps in a mechanical system.
Abstract
Macroscopic mechanical objects and electromagnetic degrees of freedom couple to each other via radiation pressure. Optomechanical systems with sufficiently strong coupling are predicted to exhibit quantum effects and are a topic of considerable interest. Devices reaching this regime would offer new types of control of the quantum state of both light and matter and would provide a new arena in which to explore the boundary between quantum and classical physics. Experiments to date have achieved sufficient optomechanical coupling to laser-cool mechanical devices but have not yet reached the quantum regime. The outstanding technical challenge in this field is integrating sensitive micromechanical elements (which must be small, light, and flexible) into high finesse cavities (which are typically much more rigid and massive) without compromising the mechanical or optical properties of…
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