Daniel RamosIan W. FrankParag B. Deotareİrfan BuluMarko Lončar
We investigate the coupling between mechanical and optical modes supported by coupled, freestanding, photonic crystal nanobeam cavities. We show that localized cavity modes for a given gap between the nanobeams provide weak optomechanical coupling with out-of-plane mechanical modes. However, we show that the coupling can be significantly increased, more than an order of magnitude for the symmetric mechanical mode, due to optical resonances that arise from the interaction of the localized cavity modes with standing waves formed by the reflection from thesubstrate. Finally, amplification of motion for the symmetric mode has been observed and attributed to the strong optomechanical interaction of our hybrid system. The amplitude of these self-sustained oscillations is large enough to put the system into a non-linear oscillation regime where a mixing between the mechanical modes is experimentally observed and theoretically explained.
Parag B. DeotareMurray W. McCutcheonIan W. FrankMughees KhanMarko Lončar
Patrick M. WinterGregory M. LanzaSamuel A. WicklineMarc MadouChunlei WangParag B. DeotareMarko LončarYoke Khin YapJérôme RoseMélanie AuffanOlivier ProuxVincent NivièreJean‐Yves BotteroZhong Lin WangYing LiuRonald G. PolcawichJ. S. PulskampRobert M. ProieWoo‐Tae ParkSergei V. KalininBrian J. RodriguezAndréi L. KholkinGang Logan LiuJao van de LagemaatLorenzo ValdevitJohn W. HutchinsonSeajin OhMarc MadouKatja TonischEnrica De RosaJoseph Fernandez‐MoureEnnio TasciottiDenis GebauerBrian E. O’NeillKing C. Li
Ian RousseauIrene Sánchez ArribasJ.‐F. CarlinR. ButtéN. Grandjean
Ian W. FrankParag B. DeotareMurray W. McCutcheonMarko Lončar