Towards directional force sensing in levitated optomechanics
Abstract
Levitated nanoparticles are being intensively investigated from two different perspectives: as a potential realisation of macroscopic quantum coherence; and as ultra-sensitive sensors of force, down to the zeptoNewton level, with a range of various applications, including the search for Dark Matter. A future aim is to merge these two strands, enabling the development of quantum-limited sensors. Here we propose that mechanical cross-correlation spectra Sxy(ω) offer new possibilities: once detector misalignment errors are minimised, the spectral shape of Sxy(ω) directly points out the orientation of an external stochastic force, offering something akin to a compass in the x-y plane. We analyse this for detection of microscopic gas currents, but any broad spectrum directed force will suffice, enabling straightforward investigation with laboratory test forces with or without cavities. For a cavity set-up, we analyse misalignment imprecisions between detectors and motional modes due to for example optical back-actions that mask the signature of the directed forces, and show how to suppress them. Near quantum regimes, we quantify the imprecision due to the x-y correlating effect of quantum shot noise imprecision.
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