Heterodyne photodetection measurements on cavity optomechanical systems: Interpretation of sideband asymmetry and limits to a classical explanation
Kjetil Borkje

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how heterodyne photodetection reveals sideband asymmetry in cavity optomechanical systems, highlighting its quantum origins, dependence on detector models, and differences from classical explanations at low temperatures.
Contribution
It clarifies the interpretation of sideband asymmetry in heterodyne detection, showing its dependence on detector models and contrasting quantum and classical predictions.
Findings
Sideband asymmetry reflects quantum noise asymmetry in the optical regime.
Detector choice influences the interpretation of sideband asymmetry.
Classical models cannot reproduce zero-point motion effects at low temperatures.
Abstract
We consider a system where an optical cavity mode is parametrically coupled to a mechanical oscillator. A laser beam driving the cavity at its resonance frequency will acquire red- and blue-shifted sidebands due to noise in the position of the mechanical oscillator. In a classical theory without noise in the electromagnetic field, the powers of these sidebands are of equal magnitude. In a quantum theory, however, an asymmetry between the sidebands can be resolved when the oscillator's average number of vibrational excitations (phonons) becomes small, i.e., comparable to 1. We discuss the interpretation of this sideband asymmetry in a heterodyne photodetection measurement scheme and show that it depends on the choice of detector model. In the optical regime, standard photodetection theory leads to a photocurrent noise spectrum given by normal and time ordered expectation values. The…
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