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Quantum nondemolition measurement of optical field fluctuations by optomechanical interaction
arXiv
Authors: A. Pontin, M. Bonaldi, A. Borrielli, L. Marconi, F. Marino, G. Pandraud, G. A. Prodi, P. M. Sarro, E. Serra, F. Marin
Year
2016
Paper ID
42595
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
143
Citations
N/A
Abstract
According to quantum mechanics, if we keep observing a continuous variable we generally disturb its evolution. For a class of observables, however, it is possible to implement a so-called quantum nondemolition measurement: by confining the perturbation to the conjugate variable, the observable is estimated with arbitrary accuracy, or prepared in a well-known state. For instance, when the light bounces on a movable mirror, its intensity is not perturbed (the effect is just seen on the phase of the radiation), but the radiation pressure allows to trace back its fluctuations by observing the mirror motion. In this work, we implement a cavity opto-mechanical experiment based on an oscillating micro-mirror, and we measure correlations between the output light intensity fluctuations and the mirror motion. We demonstrate that the uncertainty of the former is reduced below the shot-noise level determined by the corpuscular nature of light.
Why This Paper Matters
- It adds a 2016 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- According to quantum mechanics, if we keep observing a continuous variable we generally disturb its evolution.
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