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      Optomechanical many-body cooling to the ground state using frustration

      , , ,
      Physical Review A
      American Physical Society (APS)

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          Computable measure of entanglement

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            Experimental entanglement of four particles

            Quantum mechanics allows for many-particle wavefunctions that cannot be factorized into a product of single-particle wavefunctions, even when the constituent particles are entirely distinct. Such 'entangled' states explicitly demonstrate the non-local character of quantum theory, having potential applications in high-precision spectroscopy, quantum communication, cryptography and computation. In general, the more particles that can be entangled, the more clearly nonclassical effects are exhibited--and the more useful the states are for quantum applications. Here we implement a recently proposed entanglement technique to generate entangled states of two and four trapped ions. Coupling between the ions is provided through their collective motional degrees of freedom, but actual motional excitation is minimized. Entanglement is achieved using a single laser pulse, and the method can in principle be applied to any number of ions.
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              Quantum theory of cavity-assisted sideband cooling of mechanical motion.

              We present a quantum-mechanical theory of the cooling of a cantilever coupled via radiation pressure to an illuminated optical cavity. Applying the quantum noise approach to the fluctuations of the radiation pressure force, we derive the optomechanical cooling rate and the minimum achievable phonon number. We find that reaching the quantum limit of arbitrarily small phonon numbers requires going into the good-cavity (resolved phonon sideband) regime where the cavity linewidth is much smaller than the mechanical frequency and the corresponding cavity detuning. This is in contrast to the common assumption that the mechanical frequency and the cavity detuning should be comparable to the cavity damping.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                PLRAAN
                Physical Review A
                Phys. Rev. A
                American Physical Society (APS)
                2469-9926
                2469-9934
                August 2016
                August 25 2016
                : 94
                : 2
                Article
                10.1103/PhysRevA.94.023844
                9fa920ea-54b8-4497-a5f3-c440008c07f3
                © 2016

                http://link.aps.org/licenses/aps-default-license

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