Optical coherent feedback control of a mechanical oscillator
Maryse Ernzer, Manel Bosch Aguilera, Matteo Brunelli, Gian-Luca, Schmid, Thomas M. Karg, Christoph Bruder, Patrick P. Potts, Philipp, Treutlein

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates an experimental and theoretical study of optical coherent feedback to control and cool a nanomechanical membrane's motion, achieving near-ground-state cooling with low optical power in an unresolved sideband regime.
Contribution
It introduces a novel optical coherent feedback method for quantum control of mechanical oscillators, enabling ground-state cooling without measurement-induced backaction.
Findings
Achieved cooling of the membrane to approximately 4.89 phonons.
Demonstrated control over resonance frequency and damping rate via feedback.
Reduced optical power requirement compared to traditional cavity cooling methods.
Abstract
Feedback is a powerful and ubiquitous technique both in classical and quantum system control. Its standard implementation relies on measuring the state of a system, processing the classical signal, and feeding it back to the system. In quantum physics, however, measurements not only read out the state of the system but also modify it irreversibly. Coherent feedback is a different kind of feedback that coherently processes and feeds back quantum signals without actually measuring the system. Here, we report on the experimental realization and the theoretical analysis of an optical coherent feedback platform to control the motional state of a nanomechanical membrane in an optical cavity. The coherent feedback loop consists of a light field interacting twice with the same mechanical mode through different cavity modes, without {performing any} measurement. Tuning the optical phase and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators · Photonic and Optical Devices · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications
