A room temperature optomechanical squeezer
Nancy Aggarwal

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the first room temperature optomechanical system that observes quantum radiation pressure noise and squeezing, advancing quantum noise reduction techniques for gravitational wave detectors.
Contribution
It introduces a room temperature optomechanical setup capable of generating and observing quantum squeezing and radiation pressure noise, with optimized cavity and mechanical properties.
Findings
First observation of QRPN at room temperature.
First direct observation of OM squeezing at room temperature.
Quantum correlations observed in the audio frequency band.
Abstract
One of the noise sources that currently limits gravitational wave (GW) detectors comes from the quantum nature of the light causing uncertain amplitude and phase. Phase uncertainty limits the precision of an interferometric measurement. This measurement is also subject to quantum back-action, caused by the radiation pressure force fluctuations produced by the amplitude uncertainty (QRPN). In order to lower this quantum noise, GW detectors plan to use squeezed light injection. In this thesis, I focus on using radiation-pressure-mediated optomechanical (OM) interaction to generate squeezed light. Creating squeezed states by using OM interaction enables wavelength-independent squeezed light sources that may also be more compact and robust than traditionally used non-linear crystals. We analyze the system with realistic imperfections (losses & classical noise), and use the concepts to…
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