Dynamics of levitated nanospheres: towards the strong coupling regime
T. S. Monteiro, J. Millen, G. A. T. Pender, Florian Marquardt, D., Chang, P. F. Barker

TL;DR
This paper explores the dynamics of levitated nanospheres in optical traps, focusing on self-trapping regimes and the potential to achieve strong light-matter coupling for quantum optomechanics.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of self-trapping regimes where mechanical frequency and coupling depend on optical intensity, and demonstrates the feasibility of reaching strong coupling with larger nanospheres.
Findings
Effective optomechanical coupling increases with sphere radius.
Bistability can occur at very weak laser drives, independent of intracavity intensity.
Large nanospheres enable hybridization of optical and mechanical modes.
Abstract
The use of levitated nanospheres represents a new paradigm for the optomechanical cooling of a small mechanical oscillator, with the prospect of realising quantum oscillators with unprecedentedly high quality factors. We investigate the dynamics of this system, especially in the so-called self-trapping regimes, where one or more optical fields simultaneously trap and cool the mechanical oscillator. The determining characteristic of this regime is that both the mechanical frequency and single-photon optomechanical coupling strength parameters are a function of the optical field intensities, in contrast to usual set-ups where and are constant for the given system. We also measure the characteristic transverse and axial trapping frequencies of different sized silica nanospheres in a simple optical standing wave potential, for spheres of radii \,nm,…
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