Macroscopic Quantum Test with Bulk Acoustic Wave Resonators

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Abstract

Recently, solid-state mechanical resonators have become a platform for demonstrating nonclassical behavior of systems involving a truly macroscopic number of particles. Here, we perform the most macroscopic quantum test in a mechanical resonator to date, which probes the validity of quantum mechanics by ruling out a classical description at the microgram mass scale. This is done by a direct measurement of the Wigner function of a high-overtone bulk acoustic wave resonator mode, monitoring the gradual decay of negativities over tens of microseconds. While the obtained macroscopicity of μ=11.3 is on par with state-of-the-art atom interferometers, future improvements of mode geometry and coherence times could test the quantum superposition principle at unprecedented scales and also place more stringent bounds on spontaneous collapse models.

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Schrinski, B., Yang, Y., Von Lüpke, U., Bild, M., Chu, Y., Hornberger, K., … Fadel, M. (2023). Macroscopic Quantum Test with Bulk Acoustic Wave Resonators. Physical Review Letters, 130(13). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.133604

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