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Stationary optomechanical entanglement between a mechanical oscillator and its measurement apparatus

POSTER

Abstract

We provide an argument to infer stationary entanglement between light and a mechanical oscillator based on continuous measurement of light only. We propose an experimentally realizable scheme involving an optomechanical cavity driven by a resonant, continuous-wave field operating in the non-sideband-resolved regime. This corresponds to the conventional configuration of an optomechanical position or force sensor. We show analytically that entanglement between the mechanical oscillator and the output field of the optomechanical cavity can be inferred from the measurement of squeezing in (generalized) Einstein-Podolski-Rosen quadratures of suitable temporal modes of the stationary light field. Squeezing can reach levels of up to 50% of noise reduction below shot noise in the limit of large quantum cooperativity. Remarkably, entanglement persists even in the opposite limit of small cooperativity. Viewing the optomechanical device as a position sensor, entanglement between mechanics and light is an instance of object-apparatus entanglement predicted by quantum measurement theory.

Presenters

  • Klemens Winkler

    Physics, University of Vienna, Univ of Vienna

Authors

  • Corentin Gut

    Physics, University of Vienna, Univ of Vienna

  • Klemens Winkler

    Physics, University of Vienna, Univ of Vienna

  • Jason Hoelscher-Obermaier

    Univ of Vienna

  • Sebastian Hofer

    Univ of Vienna

  • Ramon Moghadas Nia

    Univ of Vienna

  • Nathan Walk

    Freie Universität Berlin

  • Adrian Steffens

    Freie Universität Berlin

  • Jens Eisert

    Free University of Berlin, Freie Universität Berlin, Freie Univ Berlin, FU Berlin

  • Witlef Wieczorek

    Univ of Vienna

  • Joshua A Slater

    Univ of Vienna

  • Markus Aspelmeyer

    Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna, Physics, University of Vienna, Univ of Vienna, Department of Physics, Univ of Vienna

  • Klemens Hammerer

    Leibniz University Hannover, Institute for Theoretical Physics, Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute), Leibniz University Hannover