论文标题
观察非经典机械振荡器之间重力的前景
Prospects for observing gravitational forces between nonclassical mechanical oscillators
论文作者
论文摘要
接口量子力学和重力是自然科学中最大的开放问题之一。已经建议微机械振荡器作为进行这些实验的合理平台。我们提出了针对这些目标的实验设计,灵感来自Schmöle等人。量子坟墓。 33,125031(2016)。金球的权重命令将毫克放在大型氮化硅膜上,这些膜在彼此之间的距离距离处间隔。这些负载的膜是机械振荡器,在鼓模式下以$ \ sim 2 $ kHz频率振动。它们是通过与微波炉耦合进行操作和测量的。首先,我们表明可以在深度低温温度下测量振荡器之间的重力,其中热机械噪声被强烈抑制。当重力质量的位置表现出明显的量子波动时,我们研究了重力的测量,包括在基态或挤压状态下制备大型振荡器。我们还提出了一个合理的方案,以实现一个实验,其中两个振荡器以两种模式挤压的运动量子状态制备,该量子态在同一时间表现出非内部量子相关性和重力。尽管重力是经典的,但实验将为测试相关实验布置中的真实量子重力铺平道路。在原理实验实验中,我们操作直径为1.7毫米的Si $ _3 $ n $ _4 $ _4 $由1.3毫克金球加载。在10 MK温度下,我们观察到质量因子在1.7 kHz时的质量因子超过50万,对实验显示了强烈的希望。在实施振动隔离,低温定位和相噪声过滤后,我们预计实现实验可以通过结合已知的当前技术来实现。
Interfacing quantum mechanics and gravity is one of the great open questions in natural science. Micromechanical oscillators have been suggested as a plausible platform to carry out these experiments. We present an experimental design aiming at these goals, inspired by Schmöle et al., Class. Quantum Grav. 33, 125031 (2016). Gold spheres weighing on the order a milligram will be positioned on large silicon nitride membranes, which are spaced at submillimeter distances from each other. These mass-loaded membranes are mechanical oscillators that vibrate at $\sim 2$ kHz frequencies in a drum mode. They are operated and measured by coupling to microwave cavities. First, we show that it is possible to measure the gravitational force between the oscillators at deep cryogenic temperatures, where thermal mechanical noise is strongly suppressed. We investigate the measurement of gravity when the positions of the gravitating masses exhibit significant quantum fluctuations, including preparation of the massive oscillators in the ground state, or in a squeezed state. We also present a plausible scheme to realize an experiment where the two oscillators are prepared in a two-mode squeezed motional quantum state that exhibits nonlocal quantum correlations and gravity the same time. Although the gravity is classical, the experiment will pave the way for testing true quantum gravity in related experimental arrangements. In a proof-of-principle experiment, we operate a 1.7 mm diameter Si$_3$N$_4$ membrane loaded by a 1.3 mg gold sphere. At 10 mK temperature, we observe the drum mode with a quality factor above half a million at 1.7 kHz, showing strong promise for the experiments. Following implementation of vibration isolation, cryogenic positioning, and phase noise filtering, we foresee that realizing the experiments is in reach by combining known pieces of current technology.