Anomalous Optomechanical Damping

ORAL

Abstract

One of the most compelling features of cavity optomechanics is the ability to manipulate the motion of a nanomechanical resonator at the limit imposed by quantum mechanics. For a conventional optomechanical interaction, dynamical backaction between the mechanical and optical degrees of freedom can be used to excite the resonator’s motion for a blue-detuned optical drive, while a red-detuned pump acts to dampen it. Here, however, I will present measurements of an optomechanical device that exhibits anomalous dynamical backaction, with damping on the blue side of the optical resonance and amplification on the red side. We further observe that this amplification effect can be used to induce a parametric instability in the device, driving its motion into self-oscillations, as well as causing hysteretic behavior in the optomechanical damping, spring effect and transmission through the cavity. We look to explain these counterintuitive results by going beyond the standard theory of radiation-pressure-driven optomechanics.

*This work was supported by the University of Alberta, Faculty of Science; the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, Canada; the Canada Foundation for Innovation; and the Killam Trusts.

Presenters

  • Bradley Hauer

    • Physics, University of Alberta
    • Department of Physics, University of Alberta

Authors

  • Bradley Hauer

    • Physics, University of Alberta
    • Department of Physics, University of Alberta
  • Paul Kim

    • Department of Physics, University of Alberta
  • Callum Doolin

    • Department of Physics, University of Alberta
  • Thomas Clark

    • Department of Physics, University of Alberta
  • John Davis

    • Physics, University of Alberta
    • Department of Physics, University of Alberta