We study the optical bistability of an optomechanical system in which the
position of a mechanical oscillator modulates the cavity frequency. The
steady-state mean-field equation of the optical mode is identical to the one
for a Kerr medium, and thus we expect it to have the same characteristic
behavior with a lower, a middle, and an upper branch. However, the presence of
position fluctuations of the mechanical resonator leads to a new feature: the
upper branch will become unstable at sufficiently strong driving in certain
parameter regimes. We identify the appropriate parameter regime for the upper
branch to be stable, and we confirm, by numerical investigation of the quantum
steady state, that the mechanical mode indeed acts as a Kerr nonlinearity for
the optical mode in the low-temperature limit. This equivalence of the
optomechanical system and the Kerr medium will be important for future
applications of cavity optomechanics in quantum nonlinear optics and quantum
information science.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
We propose a circuit quantum electrodynamics (QED) realization of a protocol to generate a Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) state for N superconducting transmon qubits homogeneously coupled to a superconducting transmission line resonator in the dispersive limit. We derive an effective Hamiltonian with pairwise qubit exchange interactions of the XY type,g(XX + Y Y ), that can be globally controlled. Starting from a separable initial state, these interactions allow to generate a multi-qubit GHZ state within a time tGHZ ∼g −1 . We discuss how to probe the non-local nature and the genuine N -partite entanglement of the generated state. Finally, we investigate the stability of the proposed scheme to inhomogeneities in the physical parameters.
We propose to use cavity optomechanical systems in the regime of optical bistability for the detection of weak harmonic forces. Due to the optomechanical coupling an external force on the mechanical oscillator modulates the resonance frequency of the cavity and consequently the switching rates between the two bistable branches. A large difference in the cavity output fields then leads to a strongly amplified homodyne signal. We determine the switching rates as a function of the cavity detuning from extensive numerical simulations of the stochastic master equation as appropriate for continuous homodyne detection. We develop a two-state rate equation model that quantitatively describes the slow switching dynamics. This model is solved analytically in the presence of a weak harmonic force to obtain approximate expressions for the power gain and signal-to-noise ratio that we then compare to force detection with an optomechanical system in the linear regime.
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