Abstract

We analyze the lowest achievable temperature for a mechanical oscillator (representing, for example, the motion of a single trapped ion) which is coupled with a driven quantum refrigerator. The refrigerator is composed of a parametrically driven system (which we also consider to be a single oscillator in the simplest case) which is coupled to a reservoir where the energy is dumped. We show that the cooling of the oscillator (that can be achieved due to the resonant transport of its phonon excitations into the environment) is always stopped by a fundamental heating process that is always dominant at sufficiently low temperatures. This process can be described as the non resonant production of excitation pairs. This result is in close analogy with the recent study that showed that pair production is responsible for enforcing the validity of the dynamical version of the third law of thermodynamics (Phys. Rev. E 95, 012146). Interestingly, we relate our model to the usual ones used to describe laser cooling of a single trapped ion and reobtaining the correct limiting temperatures for the limits of resolved and non-resolved sidebands. Our findings (that also serve to estimate the lowest temperatures that can be achieved in a variety of other situations) indicate that the limit for laser cooling can also be associated with non resonant pair production. In fact, as we show, this is the case: The limiting temperature for laser cooling is achieved when the cooling transitions induced by the resonant transport of excitations from the motion into the electromagnetic environment is compensated by the heating transitions induced by the creation of phonon-photon pairs.

Highlights

  • Cooling is a fundamental task to achieve precise control of individual quantum systems, and crucial in the development of quantum technologies

  • We show that the cooling of the oscillator is always stopped by a fundamental heating process that is always dominant at su ciently low temperatures

  • This result is in close analogy with the recent study that showed that pair production is responsible for enforcing the validity of the dynamical version of the third law of thermodynamics

Read more

Summary

A QUANTUM REFRIGERATOR AS A MODEL FOR LASER COOLING

We will present here a simple model that will enable us to study the lowest temperature that can be achieved by laser cooling. In such case, an atom (typically, a two level atom) is illuminated with a laser and three types of degrees of freedom are coupled between each other. The main simplification is to replace the internal electronic levels of the atom by a single harmonic mode. This is a rough approximation which will only be reasonable at su ciently low temperatures, where only the lowest energy levels of the spectrum of S will matter.

The model
Thermodynamics
The fundamental limit for cooling
COOLING A SINGLE MOTIONAL MODE
The limit of sideband resolved laser cooling
The limit of Doppler cooling
The role of pair creation in laser cooling
Ultra low temperatures for structured reservoirs
POWER SPECTRUM OF THE EMITTED RADIATION:
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.