Near-field levitated optomechanics with a photonic crystal cavity

ORAL

Abstract

Optically levitated dielectric particles has recently emerged as a new system in quantum optomechanics. It offers excellent mechanical coherence under high vacuum and a possibility to optically configure potential landscapes. An outstanding problem is the lack of methods to manipulate the particle at the quantum level. Here we introduce a nanophotonic interface that addresses this challenge. By optically trapping a 150 nm silica particle and placing it in the near field of a nanofabricated photonic cavity, we achieve a single-photon optomechanical coupling of up to g0/2π = 9 kHz. Combined with an efficient guiding of light through the nanophotonic structure, we demonstrate a 'per-photon' displacement sensitivity increased by two orders of magnitude compared to previous experiments using far-field detection. I will discuss future outlook of the work, including several room-temperature quantum experiments that can be performed.

*This project was supported by the European Research Council (CoG QLev4G and StG Strong-Q), the Austrian Science Fund under the projects F40 (SFB FOQUS), P28172, the Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter Projectruimte grant (15PR3210) and by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, as part of the Frontiers of Nanoscience program.

Presenters

  • Lorenzo Magrini

    • Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna

Authors

  • Sungkun Hong

    • Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna
  • Lorenzo Magrini

    • Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna
  • Richard Norte

    • Kavli Institute of Nanoscience, Delft University of Technology
    • Delft University of Technology
  • Ralf Riedinger

    • Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna
    • Harvard University
  • Igor Marinković

    • Kavli Institute of Nanoscience, Delft University of Technology
    • TU Delft
  • David Grass

    • Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna
    • Duke University
  • Uros Delic

    • Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna
  • Simon Groeblacher

    • Kavli Institute of Nanoscience, Delft University of Technology
    • TU Delft
    • Delft University of Technology
  • Markus Aspelmeyer

    • Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna
    • Universität Wien