Mechanical squeezing in a cavity optomechanical system with the Coulomb interaction and an optical parametric amplifier
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Summary
This study proposes a theoretical scheme for generating significant mechanical resonator squeezing using Coulomb interaction and an optical parametric amplifier (OPA). The method achieves robust squeezing beyond the bad cavity limit without needing measurements or feedback.
Area of Science:
- Quantum optics
- Cavity optomechanics
- Condensed matter physics
Background:
- Cavity optomechanics enables precise control of mechanical resonators using light.
- Generating quantum states like squeezing is crucial for fundamental tests and applications.
- Coulomb interactions and optical parametric amplification (OPA) offer novel pathways for manipulating mechanical resonators.
Purpose of the Study:
- To theoretically propose a scheme for generating steady-state position-quadrature squeezing of a mechanical resonator.
- To investigate the role of Coulomb interaction and OPA in achieving enhanced squeezing.
- To explore the robustness of the proposed squeezing scheme against system parameters.
Main Methods:
- Theoretical modeling of a single cavity optomechanical system.
- Incorporation of Coulomb interaction and an optical parametric amplifier (OPA).
- Analysis of steady-state squeezing through a cooperative process of cavity cooling and mechanical parametric amplification (MPA).
Main Results:
- Achieved steady-state position-quadrature squeezing significantly beyond 3 dB.
- Demonstrated squeezing beyond the conventional 'bad cavity' limit.
- Showcased strong robustness of squeezing against the cavity decay rate.
Conclusions:
- The proposed scheme effectively generates substantial mechanical squeezing via Coulomb-induced MPA and cavity cooling.
- The method overcomes limitations of the 'bad cavity' regime and is robust to cavity decay.
- The scheme's independence from good cavity conditions, measurements, and feedback makes it experimentally feasible.