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Steady-state microwave mode cooling with a diamond NV ensemble
- Publication Year :
- 2022
-
Abstract
- A fundamental result of quantum mechanics is that the fluctuations of a bosonic field are given by its temperature $T$. An electromagnetic mode with frequency $\omega$ in the microwave band has a significant thermal photon occupation at room temperature according to the Bose-Einstein distribution $\bar{n} = k_BT / \hbar\omega$. The room temperature thermal state of a 3 GHz mode, for example, is characterized by a mean photon number $\bar{n} \sim 2000$ and variance $\Delta n^2 \approx \bar{n}^2$. This thermal variance sets the measurement noise floor in applications ranging from wireless communications to positioning, navigation, and timing to magnetic resonance imaging. We overcome this barrier in continuously cooling a ${\sim} 3$ GHz cavity mode by coupling it to an ensemble of optically spin-polarized nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in a room-temperature diamond. The NV spins are pumped into a low entropy state via a green laser and act as a heat sink to the microwave mode through their collective interaction with microwave photons. Using a simple detection circuit we report a peak noise reduction of $-2.3 \pm 0.1 \, \textrm{dB}$ and minimum cavity mode temperature of $150 \pm 5 \textrm{K}$. We present also a linearized model to identify the important features of the cooling, and demonstrate its validity through magnetically tuned, spectrally resolved measurements. The realization of efficient mode cooling at ambient temperature opens the door to applications in precision measurement and communication, with the potential to scale towards fundamental quantum limits.
- Subjects :
- Quantum Physics
Physics - Applied Physics
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- arXiv
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsarx.2203.03462
- Document Type :
- Working Paper