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I. Marinkovic

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Nanofabricated mechanical resonators are gaining significant momentum among potential quantum technologies due to their unique design freedom and independence from naturally occurring resonances. As their functionality is widely detached from material choice, they constitute ideal tools for transducers—intermediaries between different quantum systems—and as memory elements in conjunction with quantum communication and computing devices. Their capability to host ultra-long-lived phonon modes is particularity attractive for non-classical information storage, both for future quantum technologies and for fundamental tests of physics. Here, we demonstrate a Duan–Lukin–Cirac–Zoller-type mechanical quantum memory with an energy decay time of T1 ≈ 2 ms, which is controlled through an optical interface engineered to natively operate at telecom wavelengths. We further investigate the coherence of the memory, equivalent to the dephasing T2* for qubits, which has a power-dependent value between 15 and 112 μs. This demonstration is enabled by an optical scheme to create a superposition state of ∣0 ⟩ + ∣1 ⟩ mechanical excitations, with an arbitrary ratio between the vacuum and single-phonon components. ...
Journal article (2020) - Moritz Forsch, Robert Stockill, Andreas Wallucks, Igor Marinković, Claus Gärtner, Richard A. Norte, Frank van Otten, Andrea Fiore, Kartik Srinivasan, Simon Gröblacher
Conversion between signals in the microwave and optical domains is of great interest both for classical telecommunication and for connecting future superconducting quantum computers into a global quantum network. For quantum applications, the conversion has to be efficient, as well as operate in a regime of minimal added classical noise. While efficient conversion has been demonstrated using mechanical transducers, they have so far all operated with a substantial thermal noise background. Here, we overcome this limitation and demonstrate coherent conversion between gigahertz microwave signals and the optical telecom band with a thermal background of less than one phonon. We use an integrated, on-chip electro-optomechanical device that couples surface acoustic waves driven by a resonant microwave signal to an optomechanical crystal featuring a 2.7 GHz mechanical mode. We initialize the mechanical mode in its quantum ground state, which allows us to perform the transduction process with minimal added thermal noise, while maintaining an optomechanical cooperativity >1, so that microwave photons mapped into the mechanical resonator are effectively upconverted to the optical domain. We further verify the preservation of the coherence of the microwave signal throughout the transduction process. ...
Conference paper (2019) - Lorenzo Magrini, Richard A. Norte, Ralf Riedinger, Igor Marinkovic, David Grass, Uroš Delic, Simon Gröblacher, Sungkun Hong, Markus Aspelmeyer
Optical levitation of dielectric particles is a promising platform for room temperature quantum optomechanics. The challenge is to control the mechanical motion at the Heisenberg uncertainty limit. We present a nanophotonic interface enabling strong and efficient measurements. ...
Doctoral thesis (2019) - Igor Marinkovic
This thesis explores the possibility of controlling the quantum states of high frequency mechanical resonators using infra-red laser pulses. Chapter 1 gives an overview of quantum technologies based on mechanical resonators relevant for this thesis. Chapter 2 provides the basics of the theoretical background of optomechanics. The Hamiltonian that describes the interaction between the moving mirror and electromagnetic waves will be described. The second part of the chapter will deal with methods borrowed from quantum optics and used to demonstrate non-classical behaviour of a mechanical resonator. Chapter 3 presents a physical implementation of optomechanics Hamiltonian in form of silicon nanobeam devices. Additional hardware that needs to be integrated with optomechanical devices in order to perform experiments will be described. This includes optical waveguides and fibers used for coupling light into the cavity. We will start the discussion on how effects beyond simple optomechanics model impact these devices. Chapter 4 describes methods used to microfabricate nanobeam devices on a chip. This chapter aims to give tips and hits toward the successful fabrication of optomechanical devices. Chapter 5 presents the results of an experiment demonstrating non-classical behaviour of a single optomechanical device. We will use a heralding scheme to prepare the nonclassical state of mechanical resonator and use optical detection to confirm its nonclassicality. Chapter 6 describes the measurement of Bell inequality between two optical and two mechanicalmodes. Chapter 7 is the conclusion chapter, where I discuss the results of experiments presented, aswell the potential directions of future experiments and howcontrol over quantumstate of mechanical resonators can be improved. ...
Conference paper (2019) - Moritz Forsch, Rob Stockill, Andreas Wallucks, Igor Marinkovic, Claus Gartner, Richard Norte, Frank van Otten, Andrea Fiore, Kartik Srinivasan, Simon Groeblacher
We present coherent conversion between microwave and optical signals with
an electro-optomechanical device close to its quantum groundstate, such that less than a single quantum of noise is added to the converted signal. ...
Several experimental demonstrations of the Casimir force between two closely spaced bodies have been realized over the past two decades. Extending the theory to incorporate the behavior of the force between two superconducting films close to their transition temperature has resulted in competing predictions. To date, no experiment exists that can test these theories, partly due to the difficulty in aligning two superconductors in close proximity, while still allowing for a temperature-independent readout of the arising force between them. Here we present an on-chip platform based on an optomechanical cavity in combination with a grounded superconducting capacitor, which overcomes these challenges and opens up the possibility to probe modifications to the Casimir effect between two closely spaced, freestanding superconductors as they transition into a superconducting state. We also perform preliminary force measurements that demonstrate the capability of these devices to probe the interplay between two widely measured quantum effects: Casimir forces and superconductivity. ...
Journal article (2018) - Ralf Riedinger, Andreas Wallucks, Igor Marinkovic, Clemens Loeschnauer, Markus Aspelmeyer, Sungkun Hong, Simon Groeblacher
Journal article (2018) - Igor Marinković, Andreas Wallucks, Ralf Riedinger, Sungkun Hong, Markus Aspelmeyer, Simon Gröblacher
Over the past few decades, experimental tests of Bell-type inequalities have been at the forefront of understanding quantum mechanics and its implications. These strong bounds on specific measurements on a physical system originate from some of the most fundamental concepts of classical physics - in particular that properties of an object are well-defined independent of measurements (realism) and only affected by local interactions (locality). The violation of these bounds unambiguously shows that the measured system does not behave classically, void of any assumption on the validity of quantum theory. It has also found applications in quantum technologies for certifying the suitability of devices for generating quantum randomness, distributing secret keys and for quantum computing. Here we report on the violation of a Bell inequality involving a massive, macroscopic mechanical system. We create light-matter entanglement between the vibrational motion of two silicon optomechanical oscillators, each comprising approx. 1010 atoms, and two optical modes. This state allows us to violate a Bell inequality by more than 4 standard deviations, directly confirming the nonclassical behavior of our optomechanical system under the fair sampling assumption. ...
Journal article (2018) - Lorenzo Magrini, Richard A. Norte, Ralf Riedinger, Igor Marinković, David Grass, Uroš Delić, Simon Gröblacher, Sungkun Hong, Markus Aspelmeyer
Quantum control of levitated dielectric particles is an emerging subject in quantum optomechanics. A major challenge is to efficiently measure and manipulate the particle’s motion at the Heisenberg uncertainty limit. Here we present a nanophotonic interface suited to address this problem. By optically trapping a 150 nm silica particle and placing it in the near field of a photonic crystal cavity, we achieve tunable single-photon optomechanical coupling of up to g0∕2π 9kHz, three orders of magnitude larger than previously reported for levitated cavity optomechanical systems. Efficient collection and guiding of light through the nanophotonic structure results in a per-photon displacement sensitivity that is increased by two orders of magnitude compared to conventional far-field detection. The demonstrated performance shows a promising route for room temperature quantum optomechanics. ...
Journal article (2017) - Sungkun Hong, Ralf Riedinger, Igor Marinkovic, Andreas Wallucks, Sebastian G. Hofer, Richard A. Norte, Markus Aspelmeyer, Simon Groeblacher
Nano- and micromechanical solid-state quantum devices have become a focus of attention. Reliably generating nonclassical states of their motion is of interest both for addressing fundamental questions about macroscopic quantum phenomena and for developing quantum technologies in the domains of sensing and transduction. We used quantum optical control techniques to conditionally generate single-phonon Fock states of a nanomechanical resonator. We performed a Hanbury Brown and Twiss–type experiment that verified the nonclassical nature of the phonon state without requiring full state reconstruction. Our result establishes purely optical quantum control of a mechanical oscillator at the single-phonon level. ...