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Details of Grant 

EPSRC Reference: EP/H050434/1
Title: Cavity optomechanics: towards sensing at the quantum limit
Principal Investigator: Barker, Professor PF
Other Investigators:
Monteiro, Professor T
Researcher Co-Investigators:
Project Partners:
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich Princeton University
Department: Physics and Astronomy
Organisation: UCL
Scheme: Standard Research
Starts: 01 November 2010 Ends: 30 April 2015 Value (£): 814,268
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Quantum Optics & Information
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
No relevance to Underpinning Sectors
Related Grants:
EP/H049568/1
Panel History:
Panel DatePanel NameOutcome
05 May 2010 Physical Sciences Panel- Physics Announced
Summary on Grant Application Form
The grand challenge of attempting to cool a small mechanical device towards its quantum ground state is driving intense activity in many leading experimental groups worldwide. What seemed an unfeasible target only a decade ago, now appears tantalisingly close: by means of optomechanical techniques, micromechanical resonators such as small mirrors and cantilevers have been cooled by several orders of magnitude, down to occupation numbers of order n~30. The ultimate goal of approaching the ground state (n~1) now seems a realistic prospect, although serious obstacles remain; among these, thermal coupling to the environment is the most serious.However, within the last year, three groups (including the PI's) have independently proposed a novel scheme which has a fundamental new design: a dielectric nanosphere, optically levitated in a cavity and cooled by dipole forces arising from the optical field. The lack of mechanical connection to the cavity structure in a sense insulates the device from important sources of thermal noise and gives this scheme a unique edge in relation to conventional devices. The project brings together experimental and theory groups from London and Southampton with the ultimate goal of successfully implementing this scheme experimentally, for the first time. In addition, we aim to thoroughly understand the underlying physics theoretically by undertaking complete and realistic simulations of the optically cooled nanosphere system.Once the quantum limit is achieved, the main target is to operate the device in this regime. The rewards are potentially great. This is an attainable quantum technology which offers the prospect of unparalleled sensitivity in measurement, limited only by the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. For example, it is for this reason that these devices are used for gravitational-wave detectors, which require extraordinarily precise detections of displacement. They offer also the possibility of fundamental insights into the quantum-classical border: it may be possible to investigate superpositions which differ only by the displacement of a macroscopic object. Some experimental groups are investigating dipole-force coupling cavity optomechanics using a BEC (Bose Einstein Condensate) as the mechanical oscillator. In this case, the target is already in the ground state so it is already possible to explore the quantum regime. We will also investigate this regime theoretically, in order to establish whether quantum effects like squeezing (which improve sensing in the quantum regime) may be viably generated in such a scheme, as two of the co-applicants have already identified a potentially promising regime.Finally, taking the long view, we note that in parallel to this work, small sensors such as micron-sized cantilevers are actively being developed for biosensing applications (for ultra-sensitive detection of biomolecules or as force sensors). UCL, in particular the LCN (London Centre for Nanotechnology) is a leader in this field. On the otherhand, groups (such as the Caltech group of Vahala) working to cool optomechanical devices to the quantum limit are already testing their potential as biosensors.A desirable ambition, in the long-term would be to achieve a merger of these two directions: quantum limited detection and biosensing. We will explore the viability of employing schemes based on our dielectric nanospheres.
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