Quantum state purity versus average phonon number for characterization of mechanical oscillators in cavity optomechanics

Abstract

Quantum oscillators in Gaussian states are often characterized by average occupation numbers that refer to a basis of eigenstates of the non-interacting oscillator Hamiltonian. We argue that quantum state purity is a more appropriate characteristic of such states, which can be applied to oscillators of any dimensionality. For a one-dimensional oscillator, the state purity is directly related to a thermal occupation number defined with respect to the number state basis in which the oscillator's quantum state is thermal. Thus, it naturally introduces a more versatile definition of an average occupation number. We study optomechanical sideband cooling of one- and two-dimensional mechanical oscillators in particular, and derive exact analytical expressions for the maximal mechanical state purity achievable in the quantum backaction limit. In the case of a one-dimensional oscillator, we show that the thermal occupation number related to purity can be well approximated by the average phonon number in the weak-coupling regime, but that the two differ in the regime of ultrastrong optomechanical coupling or in cases where the oscillator's resonance frequency is strongly renormalized.

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