Gigan, S. and Böhm, H. R. and Paternostro, M. and Blaser, F. and Langer, G. and Hertzberg, J. B. and Schwab, K. C. and Bäuerle, D. and Aspelmeyer, M. and Zeilinger, A. (2006) Self-cooling of a micromirror by radiation pressure. Nature, 444 (7115). pp. 67-70. ISSN 0028-0836 http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20090911-092251691
|
PDF
- Published Version
Restricted to Repository administrators only See Usage Policy. 448Kb | |
|
PDF
- Supplemental Material
Restricted to Repository administrators only See Usage Policy. 443Kb |
Use this Persistent URL to link to this item: http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20090911-092251691
Abstract
Cooling of mechanical resonators is currently a popular topic in many fields of physics including ultra-high precision measurements1, detection of gravitational waves, and the study of the transition between classical and quantum behaviour of a mechanical system. Here we report the observation of self-cooling of a micromirror by radiation pressure inside a high-finesse optical cavity. In essence, changes in intensity in a detuned cavity, as caused by the thermal vibration of the mirror, provide the mechanism for entropy flow from the mirror's oscillatory motion to the low-entropy cavity field. The crucial coupling between radiation and mechanical motion was made possible by producing free-standing micromirrors of low mass (m ≈ 400 ng), high reflectance (more than 99.6%) and high mechanical quality (Q ≈ 10,000). We observe cooling of the mechanical oscillator by a factor of more than 30; that is, from room temperature to below 10 K. In addition to purely photothermal effects we identify radiation pressure as a relevant mechanism responsible for the cooling. In contrast with earlier experiments, our technique does not need any active feedback. We expect that improvements of our method will permit cooling ratios beyond 1,000 and will thus possibly enable cooling all the way down to the quantum mechanical ground state of the micromirror.
| Item Type: | Article | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Additional Information: | © 2006 Nature Publishing Group. Received 27 March; accepted 22 September 2006. We thank C. Brukner, S. Gröblacher, J. Kofler, T. Jennewein, M. S. Kim, A. Vandaley and D. Vitali for discussion. We acknowledge financial support by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF), by the City of Vienna, by the Austrian NANO Initiative (MNA) and by the Foundational Questions Institute (FQXi). Supplementary Information is linked to the online version of the paper at www.nature.com/nature. | ||||||||||
| Funders: |
| ||||||||||
| Record Number: | CaltechAUTHORS:20090911-092251691 | ||||||||||
| Persistent URL: | http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20090911-092251691 | ||||||||||
| Related URLs: | |||||||||||
| Usage Policy: | No commercial reproduction, distribution, display or performance rights in this work are provided. | ||||||||||
| ID Code: | 15762 | ||||||||||
| Collection: | CaltechAUTHORS | ||||||||||
| Deposited By: | George Porter | ||||||||||
| Deposited On: | 07 Oct 2009 21:18 | ||||||||||
| Last Modified: | 26 Dec 2012 11:21 |
Repository Staff Only: item control page


