Abstract
Using pulsed optical excitation and read-out along with single-phonon-counting techniques, we measure the transient backaction, heating, and damping dynamics of a nanoscale silicon optomechanical crystal cavity mounted in a dilution refrigerator at a base temperature of Tf ≈ 11 mK. In addition to observing a slow (approximately 740-ns) turn-on time for the optical-absorption-induced hot-phonon bath, we measure for the 5.6-GHz "breathing" acoustic mode of the cavity an initial phonon occupancy as low as (n)= 0.021 ± 0.007 (mode temperature Tmin ≈ 70 mK) and an intrinsic mechanical decay rate of γ0 = 328 ± 14 Hz (Qm ≈ 1.7 × 107). These measurements demonstrate the feasibility of using short pulsed measurements for a variety of quantum optomechanical applications despite the presence of steady-state optical heating.
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CITATION STYLE
Meenehan, S. M., Cohen, J. D., MacCabe, G. S., Marsili, F., Shaw, M. D., & Painter, O. (2015). Pulsed excitation dynamics of an optomechanical crystal resonator near its quantum ground state of motion. Physical Review X, 5(4). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.5.041002
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