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Optomechanically induced transparency in a membrane-in-the-middle setup at room temperature

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TLDR
In this article, the authors show OMIT in a room temperature optomechanical setup consisting of a thin semitransparent membrane within a high-finesse optical Fabry-Perot cavity.
Abstract
Summary form only given. In cavity optomechanics one can manipulate the dynamics of a nanomechanical resonator with light, and at the same time one can control light by tayloring its interaction with one (or more) mechanical resonances. A notable example of this kind of light beam control is provided by the optomechanical analogue of electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT), the so called optomechanically induced transparency (OMIT), which has been recently demonstrated [1-3]. In OMIT, the internal resonance of the medium is replaced by a dipole-like interaction of optical and mechanical degrees of freedom which occurs when the pump is tuned to the lower motional sideband of the cavity resonance. OMIT may offer various advantages with respect to standard atomic EIT: i) it does not rely on naturally occurring resonances and could therefore be applied to previously inaccessible wavelength regions; ii) a single optomechanical element can already achieve unity contrast, which in the atomic case is only possible within the setting of cavity quantum electrodynamics; iii) one can achieve significant optical delay times, since they are limited only by the mechanical resonance lifetime 1/γm. Previous OMIT demonstrations have been carried out in a cryogenic setup [1,2]; here we show OMIT in a room temperature optomechanical setup consisting of a thin semitransparent membrane within a high-finesse optical Fabry-Perot cavity [3]. Fig. 1 (left upper panel) shows the phase shift acquired by the probe beam during its transmission through the optomechanical cavity. The derivative of such a phase shift gives the group advance due to causality-preserving superluminal effects which a probe pulse spectrally contained within the transparency window would accumulate in its transmission through the cavity. From the fitting curve we infer a maximum signal time advance τT ≈ -108 ms, which is very close to the theoretical achievable maximum τTmax = -2C/[γm(1 +C)], which is -109 ms in our case where the optomechanical cooperativity is C = 160. The reflected field is instead delayed, and from the corresponding expression for the maximum time delay τRmax = 2/[γm(1 +C)], we can also infer a group delay of the reflected probe field τR ≈ 670 μs [3]. In the left lower panel the transparency frequency window in which the probe is completely reflected by the interference associated with the optomechanical interaction is evident. The width of the transparency window is related to the effective mechanical dampingγeffm ≈ γm(1 +C). Therefore both delay and width can be tuned by changing C which in our case is achieved by shifting the membrane along the cavity axis. This is illustrated in the right panel, where the modulus of the beat amplitude vs Δ is plotted for different positions shifts z0 of the membrane from a field node (see caption).

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Journal ArticleDOI

Progress in optics

TL;DR: The last volume of the Progress in Optics series as discussed by the authors contains seven chapters on widely diverging topics, written by well-known authorities in their fields, including laser selective photophysics and photochemistry, laser phase profile generation, laser beamforming, and laser laser light emission from high-current surface spark discharges.
Journal ArticleDOI

Squeezed optomechanics with phase-matched amplification and dissipation.

TL;DR: This proposal offers an alternative approach to control the OMS using a squeezed cavity mode, which should allow single-photon quantum processes to be implemented with currently available optomechanical technology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electromagnetically induced transparency in optical microcavities

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the principle and recent development of EIT in optical microcavities and focus on the following three situations: coupled-cavity system, all-optical EIT appears when the optical modes in different cavities couple to each other.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fundamentals and applications of optomechanically induced transparency

TL;DR: Optomechanically induced transparency (OIT) as discussed by the authors is an analog to atomic electromagnetic induced transparency that a transmission window for the propagation of the probe field is induced by a strong control field when the resonance condition is met.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nanophotonic cavity optomechanics with propagating acoustic waves at frequencies up to 12 GHz

TL;DR: In this article, the authors demonstrate sideband-resolved coupling between multiple photonic nanocavities and propagating surface acoustic waves up to 12 GHz, and demonstrate that a phonon pulse can interact with an embedded phonocavity for multiple times.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Electromagnetically induced transparency : Optics in coherent media

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the atomic dynamics and the optical response of the medium to a continuous-wave laser and show how coherently prepared media can be used to improve frequency conversion in nonlinear optical mixing experiments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Light speed reduction to 17 metres per second in an ultracold atomic gas

TL;DR: In this paper, an experimental demonstration of electromagnetically induced transparency in an ultracold gas of sodium atoms, in which the optical pulses propagate at twenty million times slower than the speed of light in a vacuum, is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cavity Opto-Mechanics

TL;DR: In this article, the consequences of back-action of light confined in whispering-gallery dielectric micro-cavities, and presents a unified treatment of its two manifestations: namely the parametric instability (mechanical amplification and oscillation) and radiation pressure backaction cooling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Observation of coherent optical information storage in an atomic medium using halted light pulses

TL;DR: A theoretical model is presented that reveals that the system is self-adjusting to minimize dissipative loss during the ‘read’ and ‘write’ operations, anticipating applications of this phenomenon for quantum information processing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Storage of light in atomic vapor.

TL;DR: An experiment is reported in which a light pulse is effectively decelerated and trapped in a vapor of Rb atoms, stored for a controlled period of time, and then released on demand.
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