Sideband Cooling Micromechanical Motion to the Quantum Ground State
J. D. Teufel, T. Donner, Dale Li, J. H. Harlow, M. S. Allman, K., Cicak, A. J. Sirois, J. D. Whittaker, K. W. Lehnert, R. W. Simmonds

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the cooling of a micromechanical oscillator to its quantum ground state using sideband cooling in a superconducting circuit, enabling advanced quantum control of macroscopic objects.
Contribution
The authors achieve ground state cooling of a micromechanical oscillator by embedding it in a superconducting circuit, demonstrating strong coupling and near quantum-limited measurement.
Findings
Successfully cooled the mechanical motion to the quantum ground state.
Achieved strong electromechanical coupling enabling coherent photon-phonon exchange.
Performed near quantum-limited measurement resolving motion close to the Heisenberg limit.
Abstract
The advent of laser cooling techniques revolutionized the study of many atomic-scale systems. This has fueled progress towards quantum computers by preparing trapped ions in their motional ground state, and generating new states of matter by achieving Bose-Einstein condensation of atomic vapors. Analogous cooling techniques provide a general and flexible method for preparing macroscopic objects in their motional ground state, bringing the powerful technology of micromechanics into the quantum regime. Cavity opto- or electro-mechanical systems achieve sideband cooling through the strong interaction between light and motion. However, entering the quantum regime, less than a single quantum of motion, has been elusive because sideband cooling has not sufficiently overwhelmed the coupling of mechanical systems to their hot environments. Here, we demonstrate sideband cooling of the motion of…
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