Abstract
We apply the strategy of the back action evading measurement of a quadrature component of mechanical motion of a test mass to detect a classical force acting on the mass [Science 209, 547 (1980) [CrossRef] ] and study both classical and quantum limitations of the technique. We are considering a resonant displacement transducer interrogated with a dichromatic optical pump as a model system in this study. The transducer is represented by a Fabry–Perot cavity with a totally reflecting movable end mirror that the resonant force of interest acts upon. The cavity is pumped with two coherent optical carriers equally detuned from one of the cavity resonances. We show that the quantum back action cannot be completely excluded from the measurement result due to the dynamic instability of the optomechanical system that either limits the allowable power of the optical pump or calls for introducing an asymmetry to the pump configuration, destroying the quantum nondemolition nature of the measurement.
© 2018 Optical Society of America
Full Article | PDF ArticleMore Like This
Marjan Fani and Ali Dalafi
J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 37(5) 1263-1272 (2020)
Sreeshna Subhash, Sanket Das, Tarak Nath Dey, Yong Li, and Sankar Davuluri
Opt. Express 31(1) 177-191 (2023)
Shan Hao and Thomas P. Purdy
Optica 11(1) 10-17 (2024)