1. Introduction
Currently, mechanical modes interacting with optical modes is one of the most studied quantum optical systems. Generally, a macroscopic mechanical resonator is inevitably coupled to the surrounding thermal environment; the unavoidable thermal noise acting on the resonator from the environment masks its quantum mechanical behaviors. Hence, cooling of micromechanical resonators towards the quantum ground state is the first step in order to observe quantum effects of the macroscopic mechanical oscillators [
1], such as superpositions of macroscopic quantum states [
2,
3], mechanical squeezing [
4,
5], and mechanical entanglement [
6,
7]. Moreover, the ground state cooling of mechanical oscillators plays important roles in ultra-high precision measurements and the study of the quantum–classical boundary of the mechanical oscillator [
1]. Over the past few decades, there has been considerable progress towards the realization of ground state cooling of mechanical resonators, which is implemented through either passive feedback cooling [
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23] or active feedback cooling [
24,
25,
26,
27,
28,
29,
30,
31,
32,
33]. In the passive feedback cooling scheme, the thermal noise of the mechanical oscillator is suppressed by the radiation pressure force from the cavity field in an optical cavity. It is possible to achieve ground state cooling of mechanical resonators in the resolved sideband regime, where the resonant frequency of the mechanical resonator exceeds the cavity linewidth [
8,
9]. In the active feedback cooling scheme, a damping feedback force is applied to the mechanical oscillator to reduce the influence of its thermal fluctuations. In the unresolved sideband regime, it has been shown that the active feedback cooling scheme can reduce the temperature of the mechanical oscillator by a factor of 40 [
24], and the active feedback cooling schemes can cool the mechanical oscillator from 293 K to 135 mK [
25], from 2.2 K to 2.9 mK [
26], from 295 K to 6.9 mK [
27], from 297 K to 1.5 mK [
28], from 4.4 K to 1.1 mK [
30], from 10 K to 0.037 mK [
31], and from 296 K to 1.2 mK [
32]. Besides, the active feedback cooling scheme can cool the mechanical oscillator from 300 K to 350 mK in the resolved sideband regime [
29].
Moreover, a degenerate optical parametric amplifier (OPA) can be used to produce the squeezed light through the process of the degenerate parametric down conversion [
34]. It has been pointed out that putting a degenerate optical parametric amplifier (OPA) into a Fabry–Perot optical cavity can improve the passive cooling of the mechanical resonator [
21,
22,
23,
35], aid observation of the normal-mode splitting in the spectra of the movable mirror and the outgoing light from the cavity [
36], prepare a mechanical mirror in a squeezed state [
37], produce the tripartite stationary entanglement [
38], improve the precision of a position measurement of the mechanical oscillator [
39], and enhance the effective interaction strength between the optical and mechanical modes originally in the weak-coupling regime into the single-photon strong-coupling regime [
40].
The stochastic feedback cooling scheme is one of the active feedback cooling schemes [
33]. It has been shown that the stochastic feedback cooling scheme can cool the oscillating mirror close to its quantum ground state in the bad-cavity limit [
33]. In this paper, we present how a degenerate OPA within a Fabry–Perot optical cavity with a movable mirror at one end affects the stochastic feedback cooling of the moving mirror. In the presence of the OPA, using a low pumping power of 0.1 mW, we find that the movable mirror can reach the minimum effective mean excitation number of about 2.5, which is about 5-times below that without the OPA.
The article is organized as follows. In
Section 2, we introduce the model, derive the quantum Langevin equations, give the steady-state mean values, and linearize the quantum Langevin equations. In
Section 3, we introduce the stochastic feedback cooling scheme, derive the stability conditions, obtain the effective mechanical frequency and the effective mechanical damping rate, and find the variances of the position and momentum of the movable mirror in the stationary state. In
Section 4, we discuss the influence of the OPA on the feedback cooling of the oscillating mirror. In
Section 5, we conclude with a summary of the results obtained.
2. Model
We consider a Fabry–Perot cavity with length
L formed by one fixed partially transmitting mirror and one movable perfectly reflecting mirror, as shown in
Figure 1. The cavity contains a degenerate OPA. The cavity field is driven by an external laser at frequency
. Then, the intracavity photons exert a radiation pressure force on the movable mirror due to momentum transfers. Meanwhile, a thermal Langevin force acts on the movable mirror due to the coupling of the movable mirror to a thermal bath in equilibrium at temperature
T. Under the action of the two forces, the movable mirror makes small oscillations around its equilibrium position. The small displacement
q of the movable mirror changes the cavity length, shifts the resonance frequency of the cavity field, and changes the intracavity photon number. This in turn modifies the radiation pressure force acting on the oscillator, so that the optical and mechanical modes are coupled to each other. The movable mirror with effective mass
m and resonant frequency
is treated quantum mechanically. In the degenerate OPA, a pump field at frequency
interacts with a second-order nonlinear optical crystal so that a signal field at frequency
and an idler field at frequency
are generated, and
.
In the adiabatic limit, the resonant frequency
of the oscillating mirror is much less than the free spectral range
of the optical cavity (
m/s); it is reasonable to assume that there is only a single cavity mode at frequency
in the cavity [
41,
42]. The adiabatic approximation implies that the mechanical frequency
is much smaller than
, so the moving mirror is moving so slow that we can neglect several effects including the retardation effect, the Casimir effect, and the Doppler effect [
43,
44]. If we write the position operator
q and momentum operator
p of the movable mirror in terms of the dimensionless position operator
Q and dimensionless momentum operator
P of the movable mirror with commutation relation
,
, and
, the Hamiltonian of the coupled system in the rotating frame at the laser frequency
can be written as
Here, c () is the bosonic annihilation (creation) operator of the cavity mode satisfying . is the coupling constant characterizing the strength of the interaction between the optical and mechanical modes. is the amplitude of the driving laser and is dependent on the power ℘ of the input laser by , in which is the cavity decay rate due to the transmission of the fixed mirror. G denotes the parametric gain of the OPA and is determined by the amplitude of the pump field driving the OPA, and is the phase of the pump field driving the OPA.
According to the Heisenberg motion equation and taking into account the quantum and thermal noises, the quantum Langevin equations describing the coupled system read
Here,
is the mechanical damping rate.
is the Brownian noise operator of the movable mirror [
43]; it has zero mean value
, and its two-time correlation function is
where
is the Boltzmann constant. In the high-temperature limit
, one has
. Moreover,
is the input vacuum noise operator coming from the electromagnetic field outside the cavity. Its properties are
The steady-state mean values of the system operators can be obtained from Equation (
2) by setting their left-hand sides to zero. They are
where
is the effective cavity detuning in the presence of the radiation pressure defined by
. The detuning
can be controlled by tuning the frequency
of the driving field.
denotes the steady-state position of the movable mirror under the action of the radiation pressure force. Furthermore,
represents the steady-state intracavity field amplitude. It is noted that the intracavity photon number
increases with increasing the parametric gain
G of the OPA.
Restricting our attention to the strong driving regime and assuming that the intracavity photon number
satisfies the condition
, we linearize the nonlinear Equation (
2) by letting
,
, and
, where
,
, and
are the small fluctuation operators with zero expectation values around the steady-state mean values
,
, and
, respectively. Here, we drop the
denoting the small fluctuation for notational convenience. Hence, the linearized quantum Langevin equations for the fluctuation operators
,
, and
are given by
where we take
to be real and positive and
is the effective optomechanical coupling strength.
In the following, we consider the case that the driving field is resonant with the cavity field, i.e.,
. We introduce the amplitude and phase quadrature fluctuation operators
and
and the input vacuum noise quadratures
and
; Equation (
6) can be rewritten as
3. The Feedback in the Stochastic Cooling Scheme
In the bad-cavity limit
and in the weakly optomechanical coupling regime
in which the photons leak out of the cavity much faster than the optomechanical interaction, the cavity field follows the mechanical motion adiabatically. From Equation (
7), one has
where
,
,
. In the absence of the OPA (
),
,
,
, only the phase quadrature
of the cavity field is dependent on the position
of the movable mirror [
33]. In the presence of the OPA (
), both intracavity quadratures
and
are related to the position
of the movable mirror. Then, the transmitted light from the cavity can be monitored continuously in real time via phase-sensitive homodyne detection. Before detection, the transmitted field from the cavity is mixed at a 50:50 beam splitter with a very intense coherent local oscillator, whose frequency is the same as that of the external laser driving the cavity. We can change the relative phase between the local oscillator and the transmitted light from the cavity so that the difference between the intensities measured by the two photodetectors (the output homodyne photocurrent) is the output phase quadrature
. It varies linearly with the intracavity phase quadrature
by
where
is the homodyne detection efficiency, ranging from 0 to 1, and
is a generalized phase quadrature of the input noise, which can be written in terms of a generalized input noise
. The quantum noise
has zero mean value, and its nonzero correlation function is:
In addition, the noise
is correlated with the input vacuum noise
, and their nonzero correlation functions [
45] are
which depend on the detection efficiency
. For the perfect homodyne detection
, the noise
is identical to the input vacuum noise
(
). For
,
and
are mutually uncorrelated. Hence, the output homodyne photocurrent
provides information about the mechanical position
.
This output homodyne photocurrent
is sent both to a spectrum analyzer and to the feedback loop. Thus, a part of the output homodyne photocurrent
is sent back to the moving mirror to counteract the thermal vibration of the moving mirror and effectively provide cooling of the moving mirror. The feedback loop introduces an additional term proportional to the output homodyne photocurrent
in the quantum Langevin equations for any system operator
[
45]:
where
is the feedback loop delay time and
is a dimensionless feedback gain factor, and it is negative. We find that only the dynamics of the position operator
is affected by the feedback loop; an extra term in
due to the feedback is
. It is assumed that the feedback delay time
is much smaller than the cavity decay time
, the feedback delay time is negligible
, and
reduces to
The quantum Langevin equations including feedback become
Equation (
14) can be written as the matrix form:
where
is the column vector of the fluctuations and
is the column vector of the noise sources. For the sake of simplicity, their transposes are
and the matrix
M is given by
The solutions to Equation (
15) are stable only if all the eigenvalues of the matrix
M have negative real parts. Applying the Routh–Hurwitz criterion [
46], one finds the stability conditions of the system:
In the special case where
and
, the stability conditions are simplified greatly to
Using Equation (
8), we adiabatically eliminate the cavity mode; Equation (
14) reduces to
From Equation (
20), we obtain the differential equation for the displacement operator
:
where
is the effective feedback gain, and it is a dimensionless parameter;
is the radiation pressure force on the moving mirror;
represents the feedback force acting on the movable mirror. It is seen that the effective resonance frequency and the effective damping rate of the movable mirror are given by
Hence, the OPA in the cavity induces a modification in the effective mechanical resonance frequency
and the effective damping rate
since
g,
, and
B depend on
G and
.
For Equation (
20), we take the Fourier transform defined as
, solve it in the frequency domain, and obtain the expressions for the position and momentum fluctuations of the movable mirror:
where
Here,
is the mechanical susceptibility of the oscillating mirror, which describes the response of the movable mirror in the presence of the OPA in the stochastic feedback cooling scheme. In Equation (
23), for the first two terms in
and
, the part proportional to the parameter
g originates from the feedback loop; the remaining part is from the radiation pressure; the third term related to
comes from the feedback loop; the fourth term related to
arises from the thermal noise of the movable mirror. The spectra of fluctuations in position and momentum of the movable mirror are defined by
where
. With the help of the nonzero correlation functions of the system noises in the frequency domain,
we obtain the position spectrum and momentum spectrum of the movable mirror:
where
. The stationary variances
and
in the position and the momentum of the movable mirror can be calculated by
Moreover, we introduce the parameter
to show the relative importance of fluctuations in the position and momentum of the movable mirror.
4. The Feedback Cooling of the Movable Mirror
In this section, we evaluate the effectiveness of the OPA at cooling the resonator under the stochastic feedback control. In order to demonstrate the cooling of the movable mirror, it is necessary to examine the effective mean vibrational number
in the vibrating mirror, which can be deduced from the variances
and
of the oscillator in the steady-state:
The effective mean vibrational number is then given by
When the movable mirror is cooled to its quantum ground state,
,
.
The values of the parameters were chosen from the recent experiment [
13]: the laser wavelength
nm, the cavity length
mm, the effective mass of the movable mirror
ng, the mechanical frequency
kHz, the mechanical quality factor
, the mechanical damping rate
Hz, the cavity decay rate
Hz, the finesse of the cavity
, the feedback gain
, and the detection efficiency
; the system is operated under the stability Condition (
18). We take the initial thermal phonon number of the movable mirror
, and the corresponding initial temperature of the movable mirror is
T=132 mK.
The effective mean excitation number
of the cooled mirror is plotted in
Figure 2 as a function of the driving power
℘ for different values of the parametric gain
G when the parametric phase is
. Note that the effective optomechanical coupling strength
increases with increasing the laser power
℘ and the parametric gain
G. For
mW and
, the effective optomechanical coupling strength is
; thus, the condition
of the adiabatic approximation is satisfied. For a given laser power
℘,
is reduced with increasing parametric gain
G. For a given parametric gain
G, it is seen that
is decreased with increasing laser power
℘. When
mW, for
, the effective mean excitation numbers
are 12.8, 7.6, and 2.5, respectively, and the corresponding temperatures of the movable mirror are about 0.169 mK, 0.100 mK, and 0.033 mK, respectively. Thus, in the presence of the OPA with
, the cooling of the movable mirror can be improved by a factor of about 5 compared to that in the absence of the OPA.
The effective mean excitation number
of the cooled mirror is plotted in
Figure 3 as a function of the parametric phase
for different values of the parametric gain
G when the input laser power
℘ is 0.1 mW. In the absence of the OPA (
),
is not changed with the parametric phase
,
. In the presence of the OPA (
),
is changed with the parametric phase
. For a fixed value of the nonzero parametric gain
G,
takes the maximum value when
and takes the minimum value when
. The maximum value of
is larger than that without the OPA (
), and the minimum value of
is less than that without the OPA (
). With an increase of the parametric gain
G, the maximum value of
at
is increased. When
, the maximum values of
at
are 22.6, 158.9, respectively. As the parametric gain
G is increased, the minimum value of
at
is decreased. When
, the minimum values of
at
are 7.6, 2.5, respectively, which agree with the results in
Figure 2.
In addition, the effective mean excitation number
of the movable mirror against the parametric gain
G for the driving power
mW and the parametric phase
is shown in
Figure 4. We find that
almost decreases monotonically with increasing parametric gain
G. Without the OPA (
) in the cavity, the effective mean excitation number is
. With the OPA (
) in the cavity, the effective mean excitation number is decreased down to
. These results are consistent with those shown in
Figure 2. The inset in
Figure 4 gives the variation of the parameter
r as a function of the parametric gain
G for the laser power
mW and the parametric phase
. We observe that the parameter
r is always less than unity, and when the parametric gain
G is increased, the parameter
r is decreased, implying that the position fluctuations are suppressed over the momentum fluctuations; this suppression is increased with the parametric gain
G. Therefore, the effect of an OPA inside a cavity on the parameter
r in the active feedback cooling scheme is different from that in the passive feedback cooling scheme [
35], in which the parametric gain
G makes the parameter
r larger than unity, implying that the momentum fluctuations are suppressed over the position fluctuations. The reason that the ratio
r is not equal to unity is that we are dealing with a driven system and the potential energy and the kinetic energy of the movable mirror are not equal (
) [
35].
Furthermore, the normalized resonance frequency shift
and the normalized effective damping rate
of the oscillator as a function of the parametric gain
G for the driving power
mW and the parametric phase
are shown in
Figure 5. When the parametric gain
G becomes larger, the effective resonant frequency
of the oscillator is almost equal to
, but the effective damping rate
of the oscillator is significantly increased, resulting in the decrease of the effective mean excitation number
of the movable mirror, as shown in
Figure 4.