Interview for Faculty Position
Optomechanics Approaching the Quantum Regime:
Exploiting the Mechanical Properties of Light
Jack Sankey
Yale University
A major goal in optomechanics is to observe and control quantum behavior
in a system consisting of a solid mechanical element coupled to an optical
cavity. Work toward this goal has traditionally focused on increasing the
strength of this coupling; however, the form of the coupling is crucial in
determining what phenomena are observable.
Here I will demonstrate that avoided crossings in the spectrum of an optical
cavity containing a flexible dielectric membrane allow us to realize several
different forms of the optomechanical coupling. These include cavity detunings
that are (to lowest order) linear, quadratic, or quartic in the membrane's
displacement, and a cavity finesse that is linear in (or independent of) the
membrane's displacement. All the couplings are realized in a single device
with extremely low optical loss and can be tuned over a wide range in situ;
in particular, we find that the quadratic coupling can be increased three
orders of magnitude beyond previous devices. As a result of these advances,
the device presented here should be capable of demonstrating the quantization
of the membrane's mechanical energy.
I will also discuss our recent efforts to laser cool the membrane's
vibrations into the quantum regime. By coupling free-space laser light from
room temperature into a 300 mK cryostat we have cooled the membrane's motion
from a phonon occupancy of 30,000 to roughly 10.
Using a recently-implemented heterodyne measurement we hope to both observe
quantum behavior in the membrane's motion and measure a phonon occupancy
close to zero.
Friday, February 11th 2011, 10:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)
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