Measurement-based quantum control of mechanical motion

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Measurement-based quantum control of mechanical motion. / Rossi, Massimiliano; Mason, David; Chen, Junxin; Tsaturyan, Yeghishe; Schliesser, Albert.

In: Nature, Vol. 563, No. 7729, 01.11.2018, p. 53-58.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rossi, M, Mason, D, Chen, J, Tsaturyan, Y & Schliesser, A 2018, 'Measurement-based quantum control of mechanical motion', Nature, vol. 563, no. 7729, pp. 53-58. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0643-8

APA

Rossi, M., Mason, D., Chen, J., Tsaturyan, Y., & Schliesser, A. (2018). Measurement-based quantum control of mechanical motion. Nature, 563(7729), 53-58. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0643-8

Vancouver

Rossi M, Mason D, Chen J, Tsaturyan Y, Schliesser A. Measurement-based quantum control of mechanical motion. Nature. 2018 Nov 1;563(7729):53-58. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0643-8

Author

Rossi, Massimiliano ; Mason, David ; Chen, Junxin ; Tsaturyan, Yeghishe ; Schliesser, Albert. / Measurement-based quantum control of mechanical motion. In: Nature. 2018 ; Vol. 563, No. 7729. pp. 53-58.

Bibtex

@article{f6905de2397d4cd786ddf96e5944ebb2,
title = "Measurement-based quantum control of mechanical motion",
abstract = "Controlling a quantum system by using observations of its dynamics is complicated by the backaction of the measurement process—that is, the unavoidable quantum disturbance caused by coupling the system to a measurement apparatus. An efficient measurement is one that maximizes the amount of information gained per disturbance incurred. Real-time feedback can then be used to cancel the backaction of the measurement and to control the evolution of the quantum state. Such measurement-based quantum control has been demonstrated in the clean settings of cavity and circuit quantum electrodynamics, but its application to motional degrees of freedom has remained elusive. Here we demonstrate measurement-based quantum control of the motion of a millimetre-sized membrane resonator. An optomechanical transducer resolves the zero-point motion of the resonator in a fraction of its millisecond-scale coherence time, with an overall measurement efficiency close to unity. An electronic feedback loop converts this position record to a force that cools the resonator mode to its quantum ground state (residual thermal occupation of about 0.29). This occupation is nine decibels below the quantum-backaction limit of sideband cooling and six orders of magnitude below the equilibrium occupation of the thermal environment. We thus realize a long-standing goal in the field, adding position and momentum to the degrees of freedom that are amenable to measurement-based quantum control, with potential applications in quantum information processing and gravitational-wave detectors.",
author = "Massimiliano Rossi and David Mason and Junxin Chen and Yeghishe Tsaturyan and Albert Schliesser",
year = "2018",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1038/s41586-018-0643-8",
language = "English",
volume = "563",
pages = "53--58",
journal = "Nature",
issn = "0028-0836",
publisher = "nature publishing group",
number = "7729",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Measurement-based quantum control of mechanical motion

AU - Rossi, Massimiliano

AU - Mason, David

AU - Chen, Junxin

AU - Tsaturyan, Yeghishe

AU - Schliesser, Albert

PY - 2018/11/1

Y1 - 2018/11/1

N2 - Controlling a quantum system by using observations of its dynamics is complicated by the backaction of the measurement process—that is, the unavoidable quantum disturbance caused by coupling the system to a measurement apparatus. An efficient measurement is one that maximizes the amount of information gained per disturbance incurred. Real-time feedback can then be used to cancel the backaction of the measurement and to control the evolution of the quantum state. Such measurement-based quantum control has been demonstrated in the clean settings of cavity and circuit quantum electrodynamics, but its application to motional degrees of freedom has remained elusive. Here we demonstrate measurement-based quantum control of the motion of a millimetre-sized membrane resonator. An optomechanical transducer resolves the zero-point motion of the resonator in a fraction of its millisecond-scale coherence time, with an overall measurement efficiency close to unity. An electronic feedback loop converts this position record to a force that cools the resonator mode to its quantum ground state (residual thermal occupation of about 0.29). This occupation is nine decibels below the quantum-backaction limit of sideband cooling and six orders of magnitude below the equilibrium occupation of the thermal environment. We thus realize a long-standing goal in the field, adding position and momentum to the degrees of freedom that are amenable to measurement-based quantum control, with potential applications in quantum information processing and gravitational-wave detectors.

AB - Controlling a quantum system by using observations of its dynamics is complicated by the backaction of the measurement process—that is, the unavoidable quantum disturbance caused by coupling the system to a measurement apparatus. An efficient measurement is one that maximizes the amount of information gained per disturbance incurred. Real-time feedback can then be used to cancel the backaction of the measurement and to control the evolution of the quantum state. Such measurement-based quantum control has been demonstrated in the clean settings of cavity and circuit quantum electrodynamics, but its application to motional degrees of freedom has remained elusive. Here we demonstrate measurement-based quantum control of the motion of a millimetre-sized membrane resonator. An optomechanical transducer resolves the zero-point motion of the resonator in a fraction of its millisecond-scale coherence time, with an overall measurement efficiency close to unity. An electronic feedback loop converts this position record to a force that cools the resonator mode to its quantum ground state (residual thermal occupation of about 0.29). This occupation is nine decibels below the quantum-backaction limit of sideband cooling and six orders of magnitude below the equilibrium occupation of the thermal environment. We thus realize a long-standing goal in the field, adding position and momentum to the degrees of freedom that are amenable to measurement-based quantum control, with potential applications in quantum information processing and gravitational-wave detectors.

U2 - 10.1038/s41586-018-0643-8

DO - 10.1038/s41586-018-0643-8

M3 - Journal article

VL - 563

SP - 53

EP - 58

JO - Nature

JF - Nature

SN - 0028-0836

IS - 7729

ER -

ID: 208884127