4.8 Article

Approaching the motional ground state of a 10-kg object

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 372, Issue 6548, Pages 1333-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.abh2634

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation's (NSF's) LIGO Laboratory - NSF
  2. LIGO Scientific Collaboration Fellows program
  3. National Science Foundation [PHY-0823459]
  4. MathWorks, Inc.

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The motion of a mechanical object, even a human-sized object, should follow the rules of quantum mechanics, but the thermal environment can mask quantum signatures. By reducing temperature and using feedback, researchers were able to prepare a mechanical oscillator with a 10-kilogram mass close to its ground state motion, enabling the possibility of probing gravity in massive quantum systems.
The motion of a mechanical object, even a human-sized object, should be governed by the rules of quantum mechanics. Coaxing them into a quantum state is, however, difficult because the thermal environment masks any quantum signature of the object's motion. The thermal environment also masks the effects of proposed modifications of quantum mechanics at large mass scales. We prepared the center-of-mass motion of a 10-kilogram mechanical oscillator in a state with an average phonon occupation of 10.8. The reduction in temperature, from room temperature to 77 nanokelvin, is commensurate with an 11 orders-of-magnitude suppression of quantum back-action by feedback and a 13 orders-of-magnitude increase in the mass of an object prepared close to its motional ground state. Our approach will enable the possibility of probing gravity on massive quantum systems.

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