Probing the motion of a mechanical resonator via coherent coupling to a single spin qubit

ORAL

Abstract

Mechanical systems can be influenced by a wide variety of extremely small forces, ranging from gravitational to optical, electrical, and magnetic. When mechanical resonators are scaled down to nanometer-scale dimensions, these forces can be harnessed to enable coupling to individual quantum systems. In this talk we will present results showing that the coherent evolution of a single electronic spin associated with a Nitrogen Vacancy (NV) center in diamond can be coupled to the motion of a magnetized mechanical resonator. Specifically we use coherent manipulation of the spin to sense the driven and Brownian motion of the resonator under ambient conditions at a picometer length scale. We will discuss potential applications of this technique including the decetion of the zero-point fluctuations of a mechanical resonator, the realization of strong spin-phonon coupling at a single quantum level, and the implementation of quantum spin transducers.

*S.K. acknowledges support by the Department of Defense (DoD) through the National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship (NDSEG) Program.

Authors

  • Shimon Kolkowitz

    • Department of Physics, Harvard University
  • Quirin Unterreithmeier

    • Department of Physics, Harvard University
  • Ania Bleszynski Jayich

    • Department of Physics, UC Santa Barbara
  • Steven Bennett

    • Department of Physics, Harvard University
  • Peter Rabl

    • Austrian Academy of Science, Innsbruck, Austria
  • J.G.E. Harris

    • Departments of Physics and Applied Physics, Yale University
  • Mikhail Lukin

    • Department of Physics, Harvard University