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TIME AND SPACE
Evading Heisenberg isn't easy
by Staff Writers
Lausanne, Switzerland (SPX) Nov 01, 2019

Two different quantum optomechanical systems used to demonstrate novel dynamics in backaction-evading measurements. Left (yellow): silicon nanobeam supporting both an optical and a 5 GHz mechanical mode, operated in a helium-3 cryostat at 4 Kelvin and probed using a laser sent in an optical fiber. Right (purple): microwave superconducting circuit coupled to a 6 MHz mechanically-compliant capacitor, operated in a dilution refrigerator at 15 milli-Kelvin.

The limits of classical measurements of mechanical motion have been pushed beyond expectations in recent years, e.g. in the first direct observation- of gravitational waves, which were manifested as tiny displacements of mirrors in kilometer-scale optical interferometers. On the microscopic scale, atomic- and magnetic-resonance force microscopes can now reveal the atomic structure of materials and even sense the spins of single atoms.

But the sensitivity that we can achieve using purely conventional means is limited. For example, Heisenberg's uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics implies the presence of "measurement backaction": the exact knowledge of the location of a particle invariably destroys any knowledge of its momentum, and thus of predicting any of its future locations.

Backaction-evading techniques are designed specifically to 'sidestep' Heisenberg's uncertainty principle by carefully controlling what information is gained and what isn't in a measurement, e.g. by measuring only the amplitude of an oscillator and ignoring its phase.

In principle, such methods have unlimited sensitivity but at the cost of learning half of the available information. But technical challenges aside, scientists have generally thought that any dynamical effects arising from this optomechanical interaction don't carry any further complications.

Now, in an effort to improve the sensitivity of such measurements, the lab of Tobias Kippenberg at EPFL, working with scientists at the University of Cambridge and IBM Research - Zurich, have discovered novel dynamics that place unexpected constraints on the achievable sensitivity.

Published in Physical Review X, the work shows that tiny deviations in the optical frequency together with deviations in the mechanical frequency, can have grave results - even in the absence of extraneous effects - as the mechanical oscillations begin to amplify out of control, mimicking the physics of what is called a "degenerate parametric oscillator".

The same behavior was found in two profoundly different optomechanical systems, one operating with optical and the other with microwave radiation, confirming that the dynamics were not unique to any particular system. The EPFL researchers charted the landscape of these dynamics by tuning the frequencies, demonstrating a perfect match with theory.

"Other dynamical instabilities have been known for decades and shown to plague gravitational wave sensors" says EPFL scientist Itay Shomroni, the paper's first author. "Now, these new results will have to be taken into account in the design of future quantum sensors and in related applications such as backaction-free quantum amplification."

Research Report: "Two-tone optomechanical instability and its fundamental implications for backaction-evading measurements"


Related Links
Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne
Understanding Time and Space


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TIME AND SPACE
Neutrino produced in a cosmic collider far away
Bonn, Germany (SPX) Oct 03, 2019
The neutrino event IceCube 170922A, detected at the IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the South Pole, appears to originate from the distant active galaxy TXS 0506+056, at a light travel distance of 3.8 billion light-years. TXS 0506+056 is one of many active galaxies and it remained a mystery, why and how only this particular galaxy generated neutrinos so far. An international team of researchers led by Silke Britzen from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, studied high-res ... read more

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