Yiqi Wang

Yiqi Wang

Ph.D. 2023
Applied Physics

Current Position: HQI Postdoctoral Fellow

Current Institution: Harvard University

LinkedIn: Yiqi Wang | LinkedIn

Advisor: Jack Harris

Degree Date: August 2023

Research Website: Yiqi Wang

Thesis Title: Manipulating and measuring states of a superfluid optomechanical resonator in the quantum regime

Thesis Abstract: What is the largest and most tangible object to reveal purely quantum phenomena? Macroscopic mechanical devices in the quantum regime can play a crucial role in quantum communication, quantum sensing, and tests of quantum mechanics. In this talk, I will describe my work toward manipulating and measuring a nanogram superfluid optomechanical resonator in the quantum regime. The mechanical resonator is the density wave of superfluid helium-4 in a fiber-based Fabry-Perot cavity. The light as a gentle quantum “drumstick” is used to control the motion of the helium, while the helium in exchange imprints information about its motion on the emitted light. For such a large object, a myriad of different factors conspire to mask quantum effects. However, I can circumvent some of the obstacles by leveraging the material properties of superfluid helium and by using single-photon counting techniques. In the experiment, I manipulated and characterized the state of the mechanics through optomechanical coupling and by performing photon counting measurements on the scattered light. I measured this mechanical resonator’s second/third/fourth-order coherence functions while it was in a thermal state with less than three phonons. In addition, I drove this mechanical resonator to a nearly coherent state. The state had around two phonons’ worth of fluctuations while its amplitude corresponded to 4X104 phonons.  Following the DLCZ protocol, I conditionally prepared non-classical photon-phonon entangled states. These experiments explored quantum states in macroscopic objects and may lead to new quantum-enhanced applications.

Information updated 7/17/25

News

No results found.