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      Strong optical coupling through superfluid Brillouin lasing

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          Abstract

          Brillouin scattering has applications ranging from signal processing, sensing and microscopy, to quantum information and fundamental science. Most of these applications rely on the electrostrictive interaction between light and phonons. Here we show that in liquids optically-induced surface deformations can provide an alternative and far stronger interaction. This allows the demonstration of ultralow threshold Brillouin lasing and strong phonon-mediated optical coupling for the first time. This form of strong coupling is a key capability for Brillouin-reconfigurable optical switches and circuits, for photonic quantum interfaces, and to generate synthetic electromagnetic fields. While applicable to liquids quite generally, our demonstration uses superfluid helium. Configured as a Brillouin gyroscope this provides the prospect of measuring superfluid circulation with unprecedented precision, and to explore the rich physics of quantum fluid dynamics, from quantized vorticity to quantum turbulence.

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          Cavity cooling of a microlever.

          The prospect of realizing entangled quantum states between macroscopic objects and photons has recently stimulated interest in new laser-cooling schemes. For example, laser-cooling of the vibrational modes of a mirror can be achieved by subjecting it to a radiation or photothermal pressure, actively controlled through a servo loop adjusted to oppose its brownian thermal motion within a preset frequency window. In contrast, atoms can be laser-cooled passively without such active feedback, because their random motion is intrinsically damped through their interaction with radiation. Here we report direct experimental evidence for passive (or intrinsic) optical cooling of a micromechanical resonator. We exploit cavity-induced photothermal pressure to quench the brownian vibrational fluctuations of a gold-coated silicon microlever from room temperature down to an effective temperature of 18 K. Extending this method to optical-cavity-induced radiation pressure might enable the quantum limit to be attained, opening the way for experimental investigations of macroscopic quantum superposition states involving numbers of atoms of the order of 10(14).
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            Microresonator Brillouin gyroscope

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              Observation of spontaneous Brillouin cooling

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                15 July 2019
                Article
                1907.06811
                9582a573-c1c4-4939-b930-b7064997cff1

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Custom metadata
                Main text: 6 pages, 4 figures. Supplementary material: 23 pages, 13 figures
                physics.optics quant-ph

                Quantum physics & Field theory,Optical materials & Optics
                Quantum physics & Field theory, Optical materials & Optics

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