Mesoscopic physics of nanomechanical systems
Adrian Bachtold, Joel Moser, and M. I. Dykman

TL;DR
This review explores the mesoscopic physics of nanomechanical systems, highlighting their nonlinear dynamics, fluctuations, and applications in classical and quantum physics research.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive conceptual overview of the theoretical ideas, experimental findings, and applications related to mesoscopic phenomena in nanomechanical systems.
Findings
Nanomechanical systems exhibit significant fluctuations and nonlinear behavior at small scales.
Periodic driving induces multistability and affects fluctuation dynamics.
Theoretical techniques are introduced to analyze complex vibrational phenomena.
Abstract
Nanomechanics has brought mesoscopic physics into the world of vibrations. Because nanomechanical systems are small, fluctuations are significant, the vibrations become nonlinear already for comparatively small amplitudes, and new mechanisms of dissipation come into play. At the same time, the exquisite control of these systems makes them a platform for studying many problems of classical and quantum physics far from thermal equilibrium in a well-characterized setting. This review describes, at a conceptual level, basic theoretical ideas and explicative experiments pertaining to mesoscopic physics of nanomechanical systems. Major applications of nanomechanics in science and technology are also outlined. A broad range of phenomena related to the conservative as well as dissipative nonlinearity and fluctuations are discussed within a unifying framework. They include the linear response of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Nonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation
