Quantum optomechanical system in a Mach-Zehnder interferometer
Alberto Barchielli, Matteo Gregoratti

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that a Mach-Zehnder interferometer with a quantum oscillating mirror can generate and detect squeezed light through radiation pressure interactions without the need for a cavity, using quantum stochastic calculus.
Contribution
It introduces a cavity-free scheme for generating squeezed light via radiation pressure in a Mach-Zehnder interferometer modeled with quantum stochastic calculus.
Findings
Squeezed light can be generated without a cavity.
Negative Mandel Q-parameter indicates non-classical light.
Nearly complete shot noise cancellation achieved.
Abstract
We consider an oscillating micromirror replacing one of the two fixed mirrors of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer. In this ideal optical set-up the quantum oscillator is subjected to the radiation pressure interaction of travelling light waves, no cavity is involved. This configuration shows that squeezed light can be generated by pure scattering on a quantum system, without involving a cavity. The squeezing can be detected at the output ports of the interferometer either by direct detection or by measuring the spectrum of the difference current. We use the Hudson-Parthasarathy equation to model the global evolution. It can describe the scattering of photons and the resulting radiation pressure interaction on the quantum oscillator. It allows to consider also the interaction with a thermal bath. In this way we have a unitary dynamics giving the evolution of oscillator and fields. The Bose…
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