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Sideband cooling micromechanical motion to the quantum ground state

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TLDR
In this article, a microwave cavity optomechanical system was realized by coupling the motion of an aluminum membrane to the resonance frequency of a superconducting circuit, and damping and cooling the membrane motion with radiation pressure forces.
Abstract
Accessing the full quantum nature of a macroscopic mechanical oscillator first requires elimination of its classical, thermal motion. The flourishing field of cavity optomechanics provides a nearly ideal architecture for both preparation and detection of mechanical motion at the quantum level. We realize a microwave cavity optomechanical system by coupling the motion of an aluminum membrane to the resonance frequency of a superconducting circuit [1]. By exciting the microwave circuit below its resonance frequency, we damp and cool the membrane motion with radiation pressure forces, analogous to laser cooling of the motion of trapped ions. The microwave excitation serves not only to cool, but also to monitor the displacement of the membrane. A nearly shot-noise limited, Josephson parametric amplifier is used to detect the mechanical sidebands of this microwave excitation and quantify the thermal motion as it is cooled with radiation pressure forces to its quantum ground state [2].

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Improving macroscopic entanglement with nonlocal mechanical squeezing

TL;DR: An efficient mechanism to generate mechanical entanglement in a two-cascaded cavity optomechanical system with optical parametric amplifiers inside the two coupled cavities using especially tuned OPAs to squeeze the hybrid mode composed of two mechanical modes, leading to strong macroscopicEntanglement between the two movable mirrors.
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Macroscopic superpositions via nested interferometry: finite temperature and decoherence considerations

TL;DR: In this article, a scheme for achieving macroscopic superpositions via nested interferometry was proposed, and the effects of finite temperature on the superposition produced were investigated.
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Electromechanical Quantum Simulators

TL;DR: In this article, a universal, scalable, and integrated quantum computing platform based on tunable nonlinear electromechanical nano-oscillators is proposed, where qubits are encoded in the anharmonic vibrational modes of mechanical nanoresonators, whose effective coupling is mediated by virtual fluctuations of an intermediate superconducting artificial atom.
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Sideband transitions in a two-mode Josephson circuit driven beyond the rotating wave approximation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors experimentally, numerically, and analytically explore strongly driven two-mode Josephson circuits in the regime of strong driving and large detuning and find that the breakdown of the RWA in this regime does not lead to qualitatively different dynamics, but gives the same results as RWA theory at higher drive strengths, enhancing the coupling rates compared to what one would predict.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Observation of Bose-Einstein Condensation in a Dilute Atomic Vapor

TL;DR: A Bose-Einstein condensate was produced in a vapor of rubidium-87 atoms that was confined by magnetic fields and evaporatively cooled and exhibited a nonthermal, anisotropic velocity distribution expected of the minimum-energy quantum state of the magnetic trap in contrast to the isotropic, thermal velocity distribution observed in the broad uncondensed fraction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum ground state and single-phonon control of a mechanical resonator

TL;DR: This work shows that conventional cryogenic refrigeration can be used to cool a mechanical mode to its quantum ground state by using a microwave-frequency mechanical oscillator—a ‘quantum drum’—coupled to a quantum bit, which is used to measure the quantum state of the resonator.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cavity Optomechanics: Back-Action at the Mesoscale

TL;DR: Recent experiments have reached a regime where the back-action of photons caused by radiation pressure can influence the optomechanical dynamics, giving rise to a host of long-anticipated phenomena.
Journal ArticleDOI

Introduction to quantum noise, measurement, and amplification

TL;DR: In this paper, a pedagogical introduction to the physics of quantum noise and its connections to quantum measurement and quantum amplification is given, and the basics of weak continuous measurements are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optomechanically Induced Transparency

TL;DR: Electromagnetically induced transparency in an optomechanical system whereby the coupling of a cavity to a light pulse is used to control the transmission of light through the cavity may help to allow the engineering of light storage and routing on an optical chip.
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