We'd like to welcome Peter Sound African American from San Diego attitude group.
Optical mechanics, one very important distinction
is the absence of any cavities.
Thank you very much, Jack.
And I want to thank the organizers,
Troy and Mary, anyone and everyone who's been helpful.
This is really fantastic, coming together with people.
It's really a pleasure to be able to share some of this work.
It's a little off the beat path for some folks
that I really like to start to talk to.
So the title of this presentation
is Traveling Way Photon-Phonon Interactions,
Coupling the Phonon and Moving Reference Frames.
And here's a sort of an artistic illustration
of some of the types of light-matter interactions
that you can have on ship.
So you guys probably know Yale University project
with Jack.
And our group always say, I'm sure everybody says that,
Beckton looks like a Belgian waffle, sort of,
from the front.
And our group said the most of our work
was on the fourth floor.
We do a lot of different things related
to lights and phonons, but that really seems to be the theme.
Some of the work will be coming out soon and involved.
And studies of the participation of noise
in produced by TLSs, that's something
you've heard a little bit about this morning,
the conference of phonon participation.
It was also understanding, you know,
the fundamental limits of how long a phonon lives on the ship.
And what I'll be telling you about today,
because I think it's kind of fun to interface on this,
is the physics of a traveling wave, or traveling wave
photon-phonon coupling.
I'll tell you, before I get into this,
I want to introduce you from a cabinet and problem mechanics
perspective to sort of continue a monophonic cat, which
is a really nice term that Florian came up with.
I think we're just really apt to describe
a lot of different interactions that are being created
in fibers and in the wave.
And I'll also tell you about another type of interesting
device that we've, well, I'll let you guys judge,
if you're interested or not, a device that allows us to have
traveling signals.
And in three interactions with the traveling material,
we can transduce phonons, essentially
emitting phonons and receiving them
Presenters
Prof. Peter Rakich
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01:10:00 Min
Aufnahmedatum
2015-08-17
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2017-05-22 15:04:48
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en-US
Peter Rakich (Yale University)
“Les Houches Summer School 2015 on Quantum Optomechanics and Nanomechanics”
(Organizers: Pierre-François Cohadon, Jack Harris, and Florian Marquardt)