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      Cooling a nanomechanical resonator with quantum back-action

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          Abstract

          Quantum mechanics demands that the act of measurement must affect the measured object. When a linear amplifier is used to continuously monitor the position of an object, the Heisenberg uncertainty relationship requires that the object be driven by force impulses, called back-action. Here we measure the back-action of a superconducting single-electron transistor (SSET) on a radiofrequency nanomechanical resonator. The conductance of the SSET, which is capacitively coupled to the resonator, provides a sensitive probe of the latter's position;back-action effects manifest themselves as an effective thermal bath, the properties of which depend sensitively on SSET bias conditions. Surprisingly, when the SSET is biased near a transport resonance, we observe cooling of the nanomechanical mode from 550mK to 300mK-- an effect that is analogous to laser cooling in atomic physics. Our measurements have implications for nanomechanical readout of quantum information devices and the limits of ultrasensitive force microscopy (such as single-nuclear-spin magnetic resonance force microscopy). Furthermore, we anticipate the use of these backaction effects to prepare ultracold and quantum states of mechanical structures, which would not be accessible with existing technology.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          12 September 2006
          Article
          10.1038/nature05027
          cond-mat/0609297
          5e2aaed8-7b70-4af2-a47e-acef1a0c431f
          History
          Custom metadata
          Nature 443, 193 (2006)
          28 pages, 7 figures; accepted for publication in Nature
          cond-mat.mes-hall

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