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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Room temperature optomechanical squeezing
arXiv
Authors: Nancy Aggarwal, Torrey Cullen, Jonathan Cripe, Garrett D. Cole, Robert Lanza, Adam Libson, David Follman, Paula Heu, Thomas Corbitt, Nergis Mavalvala
Year
2018
Paper ID
39407
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
181
Citations
N/A
Abstract
The radiation-pressure driven interaction of a coherent light field with a mechanical oscillator induces correlations between the amplitude and phase quadratures of the light. These correlations result in squeezed light - light with quantum noise lower than shot noise in some quadratures, and higher in others. Due to this lower quantum uncertainty, squeezed light can be used to improve the sensitivity of precision measurements. In particular, squeezed light sources based on nonlinear optical crystals are being used to improve the sensitivity of gravitational wave (GW) detectors. For optomechanical squeezers, thermally driven fluctuations of the mechanical oscillator's position makes it difficult to observe the quantum correlations at room temperature, and at low frequencies. Here we present a measurement of optomechanically (OM) squeezed light, performed at room-temperature, in a broad band near audio-frequency regions relevant to GW detectors. We observe sub-poissonian quantum noise in a frequency band of 30 kHz to 70 kHz with a maximum reduction of 0.7 pm 0.1 dB below shot noise at 45 kHz. We present two independent methods of measuring this squeezing, one of which does not rely on calibration of shot noise.
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- This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- The radiation-pressure driven interaction of a coherent light field with a mechanical oscillator induces correlations between the amplitude and phase quadratures of the light.
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