Cavity optomechanics with cold atoms
Dan M. Stamper-Kurn

TL;DR
This paper explores cavity optomechanics using cold atomic ensembles, demonstrating phenomena like cavity cooling, bistability, and quantum fluctuations, with experimental setups driven by either cavity or side pumping.
Contribution
It presents experimental realizations of atomic ensemble-based cavity optomechanics, highlighting their high sensitivity and novel quantum effects, bridging atomic physics and optomechanical concepts.
Findings
Observation of cavity-aided position sensing
Detection of optical spring and cavity cooling effects
Demonstration of optomechanical bistability
Abstract
The mechanical influence on objects due to their interaction with light has been a central topic in atomic physics for decades. Thus, one finds that many concepts developed to describe cavity optomechanical systems with solid-state mechanical oscillators have also been developed in parallel in relation to cold atomic physics. I describe several of these ideas from atomic physics, including optical methods for detecting quantum states of single cold atoms and atomic ensembles, motional effects within single-atom cavity quantum electrodynamics, and collective optical effects such as superradiant Rayleigh scattering and cavity cooling of atomic ensembles. I present several experimental realizations of cavity optomechanics in which an atomic ensemble serves as the mechanical element. These are divided between systems driven either by sending light onto the cavity input mirrors ("cavity…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Experimental and Theoretical Physics Studies
