Resolved Sideband Cooling of a Micromechanical Oscillator
A. Schliesser, R. Rivi\`ere, G. Anetsberger, O. Arcizet, T. J., Kippenberg

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the first resolved sideband cooling of a micromechanical oscillator using an optical microcavity, achieving high cooling rates and significant suppression of motional heating, paving the way for quantum ground state preparation.
Contribution
It is the first experimental realization of resolved sideband cooling in a mechanical oscillator, enabling ground state cooling and quantum-limited motion measurement.
Findings
Cooling rates above 1.5 MHz achieved
40-fold suppression of motional heating processes
Potential to reach phonon occupancies below 0.03
Abstract
Micro- and nanoscale opto-mechanical systems provide radiation pressure coupling of optical and mechanical degree of freedom and are actively pursued for their ability to explore quantum mechanical phenomena of macroscopic objects. Many of these investigations require preparation of the mechanical system in or close to its quantum ground state. Remarkable progress in ground state cooling has been achieved for trapped ions and atoms confined in optical lattices. Imperative to this progress has been the technique of resolved sideband cooling, which allows overcoming the inherent temperature limit of Doppler cooling and necessitates a harmonic trapping frequency which exceeds the atomic species' transition rate. The recent advent of cavity back-action cooling of mechanical oscillators by radiation pressure has followed a similar path with Doppler-type cooling being demonstrated, but…
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