Oh
I
I think what we did yesterday was after having found a classical Lagrangian
that was drawn to our synthetic electromechanical circuit,
which was some slightly simpler version of what I've drawn here on the board.
And by our drawing on the board, I mean projected on the screen.
We found the Hamiltonian associated with Lagrangian,
went through the description of canonical quantization,
wrote that Hamiltonian, rewrote it using some ladder operators,
and ended up with something that was sort of familiar to us as the
often mechanical Hamiltonian. We added in drive and dissipation coupling
to some external environments, certainly one of which is sort of indicated
by some coaxial cable where we imagine waves running through that cable,
coupling to our electrical circuit, and likewise some environment coupled
to our mechanical oscillator. And then wrote down Heisenberg-Valdevin
equations of motion. We imagined exciting our circuit via some port
with an intense, linear drive with one frequency, and then linearized
the equations of motion around that strong drive. And working in the
rotating frame of that strong drive, we wrote down the linearized
Heisenberg-Valdevin equations of motion. And at that point, I said,
well, we could go to the frequency domain, but let's not.
Let's live in a time domain where we want to. And in particular,
let's live in a time domain because the interaction between the mechanical
oscillator and the resonant circuit is something that we can turn on and
off suddenly. So in the end, we started with this simple interaction
Hamiltonian, and then we played the following game. We imagined driving
our circuits detuned from resonance by the mechanical oscillator's
resonance frequency, and then linearized the Hamiltonian in the
frame of the strong drive, and ended up with some equations of motion
that had been gone backwards and said, what Hamiltonian would have
given me these equations of motion? We would have a form that looked
like this, this kind of beam splitter-like interaction that
annihilates the quantum energy in the mechanics and creates them in the
microwave circuit at resonance. And something that we'll see today is
that when we do that, there's the emergence of a new time scale or a
new rate, something that governs the, if you like, the spectral width of
the peak that we associate with the motion of the mechanical oscillator
modulating the resonant circuit and emitting some photons at the
circuit's resonance frequency, that spectral width is going to be this
new rate capital gamma associated with how strongly we drive, how
strongly our circuit is damped, and the bare electromechanical
interactions. All right. So what I'm going to do for you today is, I
think what we finished with last time, yesterday, was a kind of time
dependent protocol where we imagined very suddenly and very strongly
turning on and off the interaction between the electrical circuit and
the mechanical oscillator that is very strongly turning on and then
turning off. I was going to turn on, probably. Turning on and then
suddenly, and then turning off suddenly, a strong drive which created
an interaction between our mechanical oscillator and our resonant
circuit in such a way that if we left that strong interaction on for
Presenters
Prof. Konrad Lehnert
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01:32:30 Min
Aufnahmedatum
2015-08-19
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2017-09-20 17:32:56
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Konrad Lehnert (JILA, Boulder)