Mesoscopic Quantum Thermo-mechanics: a new frontier of experimental physics
E. Collin

TL;DR
This paper explores the emerging field of mesoscopic quantum thermo-mechanics, highlighting its potential for quantum sensing, information processing, and fundamental physics investigations into quantum fields and thermodynamics.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of mesoscopic quantum thermo-mechanics as a new frontier, emphasizing its applications in quantum sensing, thermodynamics, and probing fundamental quantum fields.
Findings
Demonstrated control of mechanical modes at the quantum level
Proposed applications in quantum sensing and thermodynamics
Discussed challenges in identifying and manipulating quantum baths
Abstract
Within the last decade, experimentalists have demonstrated their impressive ability to control mechanical modes within mesoscopic objects down to the quantum level: it is now possible to create mechanical Fock states, to entangle mechanical modes from distinct objects, store quantum information or transfer it from one quantum bit to another, among the many possibilities found in today's literature. Indeed mechanics is quantum, very much like spins or electromagnetic degrees of freedom. And all of this is in particular referred to as a new engineering resource for quantum technologies. But there is also much more beyond this utilitarian aspect: invoking the original discussions of Braginsky and Caves where a quantum oscillator is thought of as a quantum detector for a classical field, namely a gravitational wave, it is also a unique sensing capability for quantum fields. The subject of…
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