A dissipative quantum reservoir for microwave light using a mechanical oscillator
L. D. T\'oth, N. R. Bernier, A. Nunnenkamp, A. K. Feofanov, T. J., Kippenberg

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a reversed dissipation regime in microwave cavity optomechanics, creating a cold, dissipative reservoir that enables microwave amplification, control, and potential quantum information applications.
Contribution
It experimentally realizes a reversed dissipation regime where mechanical dissipation acts as a cold reservoir for microwave light, enabling new quantum control techniques.
Findings
Achieved a quasi-instantaneous cold reservoir for microwave light.
Implemented a microwave amplifier with over 40 dB gain and near-quantum-limited noise.
Observed parametric instability and microwave maser action.
Abstract
Isolation of a system from its environment is often desirable, from precision measurements to control of individual quantum systems; however, dissipation can also be a useful resource. Remarkably, engineered dissipation enables the preparation of quantum states of atoms, ions or superconducting qubits as well as their stabilization. This is achieved by a suitably engineered coupling to a dissipative cold reservoir formed by electromagnetic modes. Similarly, in the field of cavity electro- and optomechanics, the control over mechanical oscillators utilizes the inherently cold, dissipative nature of the electromagnetic degree of freedom. Breaking from this paradigm, recent theoretical work has considered the opposite regime in which the dissipation of the mechanical oscillator dominates and provides a cold, dissipative reservoir to an electromagnetic mode. Here we realize this reversed…
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