Sylvain Gigan
PSL Research University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sylvain Gigan.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
Sebastien M. Popoff; Geoffroy Lerosey; Rémi Carminati; Mathias Fink; A. C. Boccara; Sylvain Gigan
We introduce a method to experimentally measure the monochromatic transmission matrix of a complex medium in optics. This method is based on a spatial phase modulator together with a full-field interferometric measurement on a camera. We determine the transmission matrix of a thick random scattering sample. We show that this matrix exhibits statistical properties in good agreement with random matrix theory and allows light focusing and imaging through the random medium. This method might give important insight into the mesoscopic properties of a complex medium.
Nature | 2006
Sylvain Gigan; H. R. Böhm; M. Paternostro; F. Blaser; G. Langer; J. B. Hertzberg; Keith Schwab; D. Bäuerle; Markus Aspelmeyer; Anton Zeilinger
Cooling of mechanical resonators is currently a popular topic in many fields of physics including ultra-high precision measurements, detection of gravitational waves and the study of the transition between classical and quantum behaviour of a mechanical system. Here we report the observation of self-cooling of a micromirror by radiation pressure inside a high-finesse optical cavity. In essence, changes in intensity in a detuned cavity, as caused by the thermal vibration of the mirror, provide the mechanism for entropy flow from the mirror’s oscillatory motion to the low-entropy cavity field. The crucial coupling between radiation and mechanical motion was made possible by producing free-standing micromirrors of low mass (m ≈ 400 ng), high reflectance (more than 99.6%) and high mechanical quality (Q ≈ 10,000). We observe cooling of the mechanical oscillator by a factor of more than 30; that is, from room temperature to below 10 K. In addition to purely photothermal effects we identify radiation pressure as a relevant mechanism responsible for the cooling. In contrast with earlier experiments, our technique does not need any active feedback. We expect that improvements of our method will permit cooling ratios beyond 1,000 and will thus possibly enable cooling all the way down to the quantum mechanical ground state of the micromirror.
international quantum electronics conference | 2007
David Vitali; Sylvain Gigan; Aires Ferreira; H. R. Böhm; Paolo Tombesi; A. Guerreiro; Vlatko Vedral; Anton Zeilinger; Markus Aspelmeyer
In this paper we propose an experimental scheme to create and probe optomechanical entanglement between a light field and a mechanical oscillator. This is achieved using a bright laser field that resonates inside a cavity and couples to the position and momentum of a moving (micro)mirror.
Nature Communications | 2010
Sebastien M. Popoff; Geoffroy Lerosey; Mathias Fink; Albert Claude Boccara; Sylvain Gigan
Optical imaging relies on the ability to illuminate an object, collect and analyse the light it scatters or transmits. Propagation through complex media such as biological tissues was so far believed to degrade the attainable depth, as well as the resolution for imaging, because of multiple scattering. This is why such media are usually considered opaque. Recently, we demonstrated that it is possible to measure the complex mesoscopic optical transmission channels that allow light to traverse through such an opaque medium. Here, we show that we can optimally exploit those channels to coherently transmit and recover an arbitrary image with a high fidelity, independently of the complexity of the propagation.
Nature Photonics | 2014
Ori Katz; Pierre Heidmann; Mathias Fink; Sylvain Gigan
Diffraction-limited imaging in a variety of complex media is realized based on analysis of speckle correlations in light captured using a camera phone.
Physical Review A | 2008
Claudiu Genes; David Vitali; Paolo Tombesi; Sylvain Gigan; Markus Aspelmeyer
We provide a general framework to describe cooling of a micromechanical oscillator to its quantum ground state by means of radiation-pressure coupling with a driven optical cavity. We apply it to two experimentally realized schemes, back-action cooling via a detuned cavity and cold-damping quantum-feedback cooling, and we determine the ultimate quantum limits of both schemes for the full parameter range of a stable cavity. While both allow one to reach the oscillator’s quantum ground state, we find that back-action cooling is more efficient in the good cavity limit, i.e., when the cavity bandwidth is smaller than the mechanical frequency, while cold damping is more suitable for the bad cavity limit. The results of previous treatments are recovered as limiting cases of specific parameter regimes.
Nature Physics | 2009
Simon Gröblacher; Jared B. Hertzberg; Michael R. Vanner; Garrett D. Cole; Sylvain Gigan; K. C. Schwab; Markus Aspelmeyer
Preparing and manipulating quantum states of mechanical resonators is a highly interdisciplinary undertaking that now receives enormous interest for its far-reaching potential in fundamental and applied science. Up to now, only nanoscale mechanical devices achieved operation close to the quantum regime. We report a new micro-optomechanical resonator that is laser cooled to a level of 30 thermal quanta. This is equivalent to the best nanomechanical devices, however, with a mass more than four orders of magnitude larger (43 ng versus 1 pg) and at more than two orders of magnitude higher environment temperature (5 K versus 30 mK). Despite the large laser-added cooling factor of 4,000 and the cryogenic environment, our cooling performance is not limited by residual absorption effects. These results pave the way for the preparation of 100-m scale objects in the quantum regime. Possible applications range from quantum-limited optomechanical sensing devices to macroscopic tests of quantum physics.
Nature Photonics | 2014
Thomas Chaigne; Ori Katz; Albert-Claude Boccara; Mathias Fink; Emmanuel Bossy; Sylvain Gigan
An approach is demonstrated that allows the optical transmission matrix to be noninvasively measured over a large volume inside complex samples using a standard photoacoustic imaging set-up. This approach opens the way towards deep-tissue imaging and light delivery utilizing endogenous optical contrast.
Nature Communications | 2011
David Mccabe; Ayhan Tajalli; Dane R. Austin; Pierre Bondareff; Ian A. Walmsley; Sylvain Gigan; Béatrice Chatel
Pulses of light propagating through multiply scattering media undergo complex spatial and temporal distortions to form the familiar speckle pattern. There is much current interest in both the fundamental properties of speckles and the challenge of spatially and temporally refocusing behind scattering media. Here we report on the spatially and temporally resolved measurement of a speckle field produced by the propagation of an ultrafast optical pulse through a thick strongly scattering medium. By shaping the temporal profile of the pulse using a spectral phase filter, we demonstrate the spatially localized temporal recompression of the output speckle to the Fourier-limit duration, offering an optical analogue to time-reversal experiments in the acoustic regime. This approach shows that a multiply scattering medium can be put to profit for light manipulation at the femtosecond scale, and has a diverse range of potential applications that includes quantum control, biological imaging and photonics.
New Journal of Physics | 2011
Sebastien M. Popoff; Geoffroy Lerosey; Mathias Fink; A. C. Boccara; Sylvain Gigan
We experimentally measure the monochromatic transmission matrix (TM) of an optical multiple scattering medium using a spatial light modulator together with a phase-shifting interferometry measurement method. The TM contains all the information needed to shape the scattered output field at will or to detect an image through the medium. We confront theory and experiment for these applications and study the effect of noise on the reconstruction method. We also extracted from the TM information about the statistical properties of the medium and the light transport within it. In particular, we are able to isolate the contributions of the memory effect and measure its attenuation length.