Optomechanical measurement of a millimeter-sized mechanical oscillator approaching the quantum ground state

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Abstract

Cavity optomechanics is a tool to study the interaction between light and micromechanical motion. Here we observe optomechanical physics in a truly macroscopic oscillator close to the quantum ground state. As the mechanical system, we use a mm-sized piezoelectric quartz disk oscillator. Its motion is coupled to a charge qubit which translates the piezo-induced charge into an effective radiation-pressure interaction between the disk and a microwave cavity. We measure the thermal motion of the lowest mechanical shear mode at 7 MHz down to 30 mK, corresponding to roughly 102 quanta in a 20 mg oscillator. We estimate that with realistic parameters, it is possible to utilize the back-action cooling by the qubit in order to control macroscopic motion by a single Cooper pair. The work opens up opportunities for macroscopic quantum experiments.

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Santos, J. T., Li, J., Ilves, J., Ockeloen-Korppi, C. F., & Sillanpaa, M. (2017). Optomechanical measurement of a millimeter-sized mechanical oscillator approaching the quantum ground state. New Journal of Physics, 19(10). https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/aa83a5

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