Cavity Optomechanics with a Laser Engineered Optical Trap
Abstract
Laser engineered exciton-polariton networks could lead to dynamically configurable integrated optical circuitry and quantum devices. Combining cavity optomechanics with electrodynamics in laser configurable hybrid designs constitutes a platform for the vibrational control, conversion, and transport of signals. With this aim we investigate 3D optical traps laser-induced in quantum-well embedded semiconductor planar microcavities. We show that the laser generated and controlled discrete states of the traps dramatically modify the interaction between photons and phonons confined in the resonators, accessing through coupling of photoelastic origin g0/2π 1.7 MHz an optomechanical cooperativity C>1 for mW excitation. The quenching of Stokes processes and double-resonant enhancement of anti-Stokes ones involving pairs of discrete optical states in the side-band resolved regime, allows the optomechanical cooling of 180 GHz bulk acoustic waves, starting from room temperature down to 120 K. These results pave the way for dynamical tailoring of optomechanical actuation in the extremely-high-frequency range (30-300 GHz) for future network and quantum technologies.
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