Sympathetic cooling of levitated nanospheres using cold atoms

POSTER

Abstract

The intermediate mesoscopic regime between classical and quantum mechanics can be explored in search of new physics using ground-state cooled silica nanospheres. In our two-chamber-trapping system, a MOT and optical tweezer prepare atoms and a nanosphere respectively for sympathetic cooling. The atoms couple to the sphere through radiation pressure forces mediated by a 1-D optical lattice. The molasses cooling of the atoms can sympathetically reduce the center-of-mass motion of the trapped sphere. Such cooled spheres can be used for precision sensing, matter-wave interferometry, and could enable new hybrid quantum systems where mechanical oscillators act as transducers.

Authors

  • Eduardo Alejandro

    Northwestern University

  • William Eom

    Northwestern University

  • Daniel Grass

    Northwestern University

  • Apryl Witherspoon

    University of Nevada, Reno

  • Cris Montoya

    Northwestern University

  • Gambhir Ranjit

    University of Nevada, Reno

  • Andrew Geraci

    Northwestern University