Hybrid atom-membrane optomechanics

Aline Faber, M. Korppi, A. Jöckel, A. Faber, M. Rakher, and P. Treutlein 

Department of Physics, University of Basel, Switzerland

In optomechanics, laser light is used for cooling and control of the vibrations of micromechanical oscillators, with many similarities to the cooling and trapping of atoms. It has been proposed that laser light could also be used to couple the motion of atoms in a trap to the vibrations of a mechanical oscillator. In the resulting hybrid optomechanical system the atoms could be used to read out the oscillator, to engineer its dissipation, and ultimately to perform quantum information tasks.

We have realized a hybrid optomechanical system by coupling ultracold atoms to a micromechanical membrane. The atoms are trapped in an optical lattice, formed by retro-reflection of a laser beam from the membrane surface, resulting in optomechanical coupling as proposed recently. We observe both the effect of the membrane vibrations onto the atoms as well as the backaction of the atomic motion onto the membrane. By coupling the membrane to laser-cooled atoms, we engineer the dissipation rate of the membrane. This mechanism can be used to sympathetically cool the membrane with the atoms. The coupling strength can be enhanced by placing the membrane and/or the atoms inside an optical cavity. Theoretical investigations show that such a system could give access to the strong coupling regime, where the atom-membrane coupling is stronger than all dissipation rates of the system.

JavaScript has been disabled in your browser