Albert Schliesser
Quantum measurement and control of an ultracoherent nanomechanical resonator


Date & heure
12/06/2019
Lieu
Jussieu  Sorbonne Université – 4, place Jussieu – 75005 Paris, Room : 24-25/101
Accueil
Using measurements to control the quantum state of a massive object’s  motion is a goal shared by communities as diverse as atomic physics,  nanomechanics, and gravitational wave astronomy. The key challenge is to  make the measurement both strong and efficient. That is, one must  acquire sufficient information about the motional state before the  environment decoheres it. Simultaneously, one must gain the largest  possible amount of information per decoherence induced by measurement  backaction. We address these challenges with an ultracoherent (quality  factor Q=1 billion) nanomechanical membrane resonator [1]. We monitor  its motion continuously, by means of a near-ideal optomechanical  transducer that operates within 35% of the Heisenberg  measurement-disturbance uncertainly relation, and the standard quantum  limit (SQL) [2]. Using a stochastic master equation, we extract highly  pure (purity 78%) quantum states of motion from the measurement record,  and can follow the resonator’s quantum trajectory in phase space [3].  The same measurement record also enables cooling to the quantum ground  state (residual occupation 0.3) via real-time electronic feedback, even  in the bad-cavity limit [2]. Disabling the feedback abruptly, we observe  re-heating with rates as low as ~1 phonon per millisecond. Exploiting  quantum correlations, we are able to perform motion measurements with a  sensitivity (all noises included) 1.5 dB below the SQL [4]—for the first  time since this limit in interferometric motion measurements has been  identified [5]. These advances open the door to a range of applications  of ultracoherent mechanical resonators in quantum information processing  and sensing.
Lev Vaidman
What can we learn from asking where was a particle inside an interferometer?

