Optomechanics under thermal gradients

Speaker: Cindy Regal, JILA University of Colorado.

Micromechanical resonator performance is often limited by the coupling to a thermal environment. The magnitude of this thermodynamical effect is typically considered in accordance with a physical temperature, assumed to be uniform across the resonator's physical span. However, in some circumstances, e.g., quantum optomechanics or interferometric gravitational wave detection, the temperature of the resonator may not be uniform, resulting in the resonator being thermally linked to a spatially varying thermal bath. In this case, the link of a mode of interest to its thermal environment is less straightforward to understand. Here, we engineer a distributed bath on a phononic crystal optomechanical platform and utilize both highly localized and extended resonator modes to probe the spatially varying bath in entirely different bath regimes. As a result, we observe striking differences in the modes' Brownian motion magnitude. From these measurements we are able to reconstruct the local temperature map across our resonator and measure nanoscale effects on thermal conductivity and radiative cooling. Our work explains some thermal phenomena encountered in optomechanical experiments, e.g., mode-dependent heating due to light absorption. Moreover, our work generalizes the typical figure of merit quantifying the coupling of a resonator mode to its thermal environment from the mechanical dissipation to the overlap between the local dissipation and the local temperature throughout the resonator. This added understanding identifies design principles that can be applied to the performance of micromechanical resonators.