Cavity optomechanics with whispering-gallery-mode optical micro-resonators
Albert Schliesser, Tobias J. Kippenberg

TL;DR
This paper explores radiation pressure effects in whispering-gallery-mode optical microresonators, demonstrating cooling of mechanical modes, quantum-limited measurement sensitivity, and potential for advanced quantum optomechanics experiments.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental study of radiation pressure phenomena in WGM microresonators, achieving ground-state cooling and near-quantum-limited measurement sensitivity.
Findings
Mechanical modes cooled to about 60 phonons
Displacement sensitivity below the standard quantum limit
Optomechanical backaction close to quantum limit
Abstract
Parametric coupling of optical and mechanical degrees of freedom forms the basis of many ultra-sensitive measurements of both force and mechanical displacement. An optical cavity with a mechanically compliant boundary enhances the optomechanical interaction, but also gives rise to qualitatively new coupled dynamics. As early as 1967, in a pioneering work, V. Braginsky analyzed theoretically the role of radiation pressure in the interferometric measurement process, but it has remained experimentally unexplored for many decades. Here, we use whispering-gallery-mode (WGM) optical microresonators to study these radiation pressure phenomena. Optical microresonators simultaneously host optical and mechanical modes, which are systematically analyzed and optimized to feature ultra-low mechanical dissipation, photon storage times exceeding the mechanical oscillation period (i.e. the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Photonic and Optical Devices · Advanced MEMS and NEMS Technologies
