Nonlinear Phonon Interferometry at the Heisenberg Limit
H. F. H. Cheung, Y. S. Patil, L. Chang, S. Chakram, M. Vengalattore

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a nonlinear phonon interferometer using a mechanical resonator, achieving Heisenberg-limited sensitivity with significant noise squeezing, advancing quantum optomechanics and precision measurement techniques.
Contribution
It introduces a novel $SU(1,1)$ interferometer platform with mechanical modes, realizing Heisenberg scaling and surpassing conventional measurement limits.
Findings
Achieved up to 15.4 dB of noise squeezing.
Demonstrated Heisenberg scaling of sensitivity ($iv N$).
Realized a 6-fold improvement over traditional interferometers.
Abstract
Interferometers operating at or close to quantum limits of precision have found wide application in tabletop searches for physics beyond the standard model, the study of fundamental forces and symmetries of nature and foundational tests of quantum mechanics. The limits imposed by quantum fluctuations and measurement backaction on conventional interferometers () have spurred the development of schemes to circumvent these limits through quantum interference, multiparticle interactions and entanglement. A prominent example of such schemes, the so-called interferometer, has been shown to be particularly robust against particle loss and inefficient detection, and has been demonstrated with photons and ultracold atoms. Here, we realize a interferometer in a fundamentally new platform in which the interfering arms are distinct flexural modes of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Experimental and Theoretical Physics Studies · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
