At the University of Colorado, an institution called CULLA, and I'm also associated with
the physics department there.
Very good.
So the lecture today is a kind of introduction to a subject which is an analogy of optomechanics,
the topic of our school.
I called it optomechanics and I'll discuss why I called it optomechanics a little bit
later.
But essentially this is the analogy of optomechanics where instead of having something that you
usually consider optical light, we replace that with microwave electrical signals that
run through wires and cables and transmission lines, and there's still mechanics involved.
So the image on the slide is a kind of electromechanical device.
It's some superconducting circuits with mechanically compliant vibrating things.
And today what I wanted to do is give you the machinery just to talk about something
like this to do the kind of basic calculations.
But before I do that, I'll describe a little bit about what I think is sort of distinct
and interesting about electromechanics.
And to do that, I'll think about why it was that optomechanics kind of became a topic.
Why did we become interested in it?
And at least from my perspective, I think part of that has to do with the special role
that mechanics and mechanical oscillation plays in the physical sciences, in measuring
the physical sciences.
In particular, if you think about the commercially available optomechanical instrument,
you can go out and buy, is the atomic force microscope.
The sharp tip sitting at the end of some flexible cantilever that you scan over a surface,
what happens is you transduce the feeble and very small scale forces of some surface into
a deflection of a cantilever that you read out very sensitively by bouncing a laser beam
off the back of that cantilever.
And in principle, you need have no more noise in the readout than is just present in the
quantum fluctuations of the light itself.
This is kind of an astounding fact.
So this notion that mechanical oscillators allow us to couple things which are hard and
awkward to measure to something that we like to work with like a laser light field,
that's sort of been a powerful idea.
And that's the commercially available instrument, but our speaker this morning,
Wynand Wazinski, used very sensitive cantilevers to measure tiny, tiny little forces of
normal metal rings in magnetic field, the kind of forces associated with the persistent
currents in those normal metal rings.
And I think that idea, that kind of nanometre concept was probably inspired by work that
a group at IBM has been doing for many years to try to build a magnetic resonance imaging
device with nanometer length scales where the kind of transduction, the conversion of
information about nuclear spin density to something that you could hope to measure is
done by the force, really, really feeble forces.
And you can take this idea further if you look a little bit more broadly.
You can see that if you want to understand something about the phase diagram of superfluid
helium, when it's superfluid, what fraction is superfluid, you can make a little kind
of tortuous oscillator where superfluid sloshes around inside of that object, which you then
read out electrically.
And again, it's the kind of mechanical structure that gives us access to something that would
be awkward to measure in some other way.
I'll get a little bit bigger, and in the end, we're interested in fundamental force of
Presenters
Prof. Konrad Lehnert
Zugänglich über
Offener Zugang
Dauer
01:32:24 Min
Aufnahmedatum
2015-08-17
Hochgeladen am
2017-05-01 21:30:04
Sprache
en-US
Konrad Lehnert (JILA, Boulder)