Glass nanoparticles trapped by lasers in extreme vacuum are considered a promising platform for exploring the limits of the quantum world. Since the advent of quantum theory, the question “At what size does an object start being described by the laws of quantum physics rather than the rules of classical physics?” has remained unanswered.
Lukas Novotny (Zurich), Markus Aspelmeyer (Vienna), Oriol Romero-Isart (Innsbruck) and Romain Quidant (Zurich) are attempting to answer precisely this question within the ERC-Synergy project Q-Xtreme. A crucial step on the way to this goal is to reduce the energy stored in the motion of the nanoparticle as much as possible, i.e., to cool the particle down to the so-called quantum ground-state.
Control over all dimensions of movement
The Q-Xtreme team has been working together on ground-state cooling of nanoparticles for a long time. Several experiments in Zurich and Vienna, supported by theoretical calculations by Dr. Gonzalez-Ballestero and Prof. Romero-Isart at the University of Innsbruck, have led to the first demonstrations of such ground-state cooling of a nanoparticle, either by dampening the particle motion using electronic control (active feedback) or by placing the particle between two mirrors (cavity-based cooling). So far in experiments, the ground state has been achieved only along one of the three directions of particle motion, leaving the motion along the other two directions “hot.”
“Achieving ground-state cooling along more than one direction is key for exploring novel quantum physics,” says Gonzalez-Ballestero of the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information at the Austrian Academy of Sciences and the Department of Theoretical Physics at the University of Innsbruck. “But so far, this achievement remained elusive as it was challenging to make the mirrors between which the particle is positioned interact efficiently with the motion along some of the three directions.” The so-called “dark mode effect” prevented cooling to the full ground state.
With different frequencies towards the goal
Now, the research at the Photonics Laboratory of ETH Zurich has succeeded for the first time in ground-state cooling of a nanoparticle along two directions of motion. A glass sphere, about a thousand times smaller than a grain of sand, is completely isolated from its environment in a high vacuum and held by a strongly focused laser beam while simultaneously being cooled to near absolute zero.
Based on theoretical predictions from the Innsbruck team, the Swiss physicists were able to circumvent the dark-state problem. “To do so, we designed the frequencies at which the particle oscillates in the two directions differently and carefully adjusted the polarization of the laser light,” says Lukas Novotny of ETH Zurich.
The work, published in Nature Physics, demonstrates that it is possible to reach the minimum energy state for the three motional directions. It also allows to create fragile quantum states in two directions, which could be used to create ultrasensitive gyroscopes and sensors.
More information:
Lukas Novotny, Simultaneous ground-state cooling of two mechanical modes of a levitated nanoparticle, Nature Physics (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41567-023-01956-1. www.nature.com/articles/s41567-023-01956-1
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University of Innsbruck
Citation:
Ground-state cooling of a nanoparticle along two directions of motion (2023, March 6)