Abstract

Quantum effects in hybrid atomic optomechanics in a system comprising a cloud of atoms and a mobile mirror mediated by a single‐mode cavity are studied. Tripartite nonlocality is observed in the atom‐light‐mirror system, as demonstrated by the violation of the Mermin‐Klyshko (MK) inequality. It has been shown [C. Genes, et al., PRA 77, 050307 (R) (2008)] that tripartite entanglement is optimized when the cavity is resonant with the anti‐Stokes sideband of the driving laser and the atomic frequency matches the Stokes one. However, we show that this is not the case for the nonlocality. The MK function achieves minima when the atoms are resonant with both the Stokes and anti‐Stokes sidebands, and unexpectedly, we find violation of the MK inequality only in a parameter region where entanglement is far from being maximum. A negative relation exists between nonlocality and entanglement with consideration of the possibility of bipartite nonlocality in the violation of the MK inequality. We also study the non‐classicality of the mirror by post‐selected measurements, e.g. Geiger‐like detection, on the cavity and/or the atoms. We show that with feasible parameters Geiger‐like detection on the atoms can effectively induce mechanical non‐classicality.

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