1,060 research outputs found
Quantum limits of cold damping with optomechanical coupling
Thermal noise of a mirror can be reduced by cold damping. The displacement is
measured with a high-finesse cavity and controlled with the radiation pressure
of a modulated light beam. We establish the general quantum limits of noise in
cold damping mechanisms and we show that the optomechanical system allows to
reach these limits. Displacement noise can be arbitrarily reduced in a narrow
frequency band. In a wide-band analysis we show that thermal fluctuations are
reduced as with classical damping whereas quantum zero-point fluctuations are
left unchanged. The only limit of cold damping is then due to zero-point energy
of the mirrorComment: 10 pages, 3 figures, RevTe
Phase chirality and stereo-selective swelling of cholesteric elastomers
Cholesteric elastomers possess a macroscopic ``phase chirality'' as the
director n rotates in a helical fashion along an optical axis and can be
described by a chiral order parameter. This parameter can be tuned by changing
the helix pitch p and/or the elastic properties of the network. The
cholesterics also possess a local nematic order, changing with temperature or
during solvent swelling. In this paper, by measuring the power of optical
rotation, we discover how these two parameters vary as functions of temperature
or solvent adsorbed by the network. The main result is a finding of pronounced
stereo-selectivity of cholesteric elastomers, demonstrating itself in the
retention of the ``correct'' chirality component of a racemic solvent. It has
been possible to quantify the amount of such stereo-separation, as the basic
dynamics of the effect
Nematic elastomers with aligned carbon nanotubes: new electromechanical actuators
We demonstrate, for the first time, the large electromechanical response in
nematic liquid crystalline elastomers filled with a very low (~0.01%)
concentration of carbon nanotubes, aligned along the nematic director at
preparation. The nanotubes create a very large effective dielectric anisotropy
of the composite. Their local field-induced torque is transmitted to the
rubber-elastic network and is registered as the exerted uniaxial stress of
order ~1kPa in response to a constant field of order ~1MV/m. We investigate the
dependence of the effect on field strength, nanotube concentration and
reproducibility under multiple field-on and -off cycles. The results indicate
the potential of the nanotube-nematic elastomer composites as electrically
driven actuators
Back-action cancellation in interferometers by quantum locking
We show that back-action noise in interferometric measurements such as
gravitational-waves detectors can be completely suppressed by a local control
of mirrors motion. An optomechanical sensor with an optimized measurement
strategy is used to monitor mirror displacements. A feedback loop then
eliminates radiation-pressure effects without adding noise. This very efficient
technique leads to an increased sensitivity for the interferometric
measurement, which becomes only limited by phase noise. Back-action
cancellation is furthermore insensitive to losses in the interferometer.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, RevTe
Quantum Noise in Multipixel Image Processing
We consider the general problem of the quantum noise in a multipixel
measurement of an optical image. We first give a precise criterium in order to
characterize intrinsic single mode and multimode light. Then, using a
transverse mode decomposition, for each type of possible linear combination of
the pixels' outputs we give the exact expression of the detection mode, i.e.
the mode carrying the noise. We give also the only way to reduce the noise in
one or several simultaneous measurements.Comment: 8 pages and 1 figur
Transverse-mode coupling in a Kerr medium
We analyze nonlinear transverse mode coupling in a Kerr medium placed in an
optical cavity and its influence on bistability and different kinds of quantum
noise reduction. Even for an input beam that is perfectly matched to a cavity
mode, the nonlinear coupling produces an excess noise in the fluctuations of
the output beam. Intensity squeezing seems to be particularly robust with
respect to mode coupling, while quadrature squeezing is more sensitive.
However, it is possible to find a mode the quadrature squeezing of which is not
affected by the coupling.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, LaTe
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