Abstract

We study electro-mechanical entanglement in a system where a massive membrane is capacitively coupled to a low frequency LC resonator. In opto- and electro-mechanics, the entanglement between a megahertz (MHz) mechanical resonator and a gigahertz (GHz) microwave LC resonator has been widely and well explored, and recently experimentally demonstrated. Typically, coupling is realized through a radiation pressure-like interaction, and entanglement is generated by adopting an appropriate microwave drive. Through this approach it is however not evident how to create entanglement in the case where both the mechanical and LC oscillators are of low frequency, e.g., around 1 MHz. Here we provide an effective approach to entangling two low-frequency resonators by further coupling the membrane to an optical cavity. The cavity is strongly driven by a red-detuned laser, sequentially cooling the mechanical and electrical modes, which results in stationary electro-mechanical entanglement at experimentally achievable temperatures. The entanglement directly originates from the electro-mechanical coupling itself and due to its quantum nature will allow testing quantum theories at a more macroscopic scale than currently possible.

Highlights

  • In optomechanics, an optical field can couple to a massive mechanical oscillator (MO) via the radiation pressure force [1]

  • We study electro-mechanical entanglement in a system where a massive membrane is capacitively coupled to a low frequency LC resonator

  • We have provided a straightforward but effective approach to preparing entangled states of low-frequency mechanical and LC resonators

Read more

Summary

22 June 2020

Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI. Keywords: quantum entanglement, quantum optics, cavity optomechanics, electromechanics

Introduction
The system
Steady-state solutions and quantification of Gaussian entanglement
Electro-mechanical entanglement in the steady state
Findings
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