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Dive into the research topics where Xin-You Lü is active.

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Featured researches published by Xin-You Lü.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

PT -Symmetric Phonon Laser

Hui Jing; Sahin Kaya Ozdemir; Xin-You Lü; Jing Zhang; Lan Yang; Franco Nori

By exploiting recent developments associated with coupled microcavities, we introduce the concept of the PT-symmetric phonon laser with balanced gain and loss. This is accomplished by introducing gain to one of the microcavities such that it balances the passive loss of the other. In the vicinity of the gain-loss balance, a strong nonlinear relation emerges between the intracavity-photon intensity and the input power. This then leads to a giant enhancement of both optical pressure and mechanical gain, resulting in a highly efficient phonon-lasing action. These results provide a promising approach for manipulating optomechanical systems through PT-symmetric concepts. Potential applications range from enhancing mechanical cooling to designing phonon-laser amplifiers.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Squeezed optomechanics with phase-matched amplification and dissipation.

Xin-You Lü; Ying Wu; J. R. Johansson; Hui Jing; Jing Zhang; Franco Nori

We investigate the nonlinear interaction between a squeezed cavity mode and a mechanical mode in an optomechanical system (OMS) that allows us to selectively obtain either a radiation-pressure coupling or a parametric-amplification process. The squeezing of the cavity mode can enhance the interaction strength into the single-photon strong-coupling regime, even when the OMS is originally in the weak-coupling regime. Moreover, the noise of the squeezed mode can be suppressed completely by introducing a broadband-squeezed vacuum environment that is phase matched with the parametric amplification that squeezes the cavity mode. This proposal offers an alternative approach to control the OMS using a squeezed cavity mode, which should allow single-photon quantum processes to be implemented with currently available optomechanical technology. Potential applications range from engineering single-photon sources to nonclassical phonon states.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Optomechanically-induced transparency in parity-time-symmetric microresonators.

Hui Jing; Şahin Kaya Özdemir; Z. Geng; Jing Zhang; Xin-You Lü; Bo Peng; Lan Yang; Franco Nori

Optomechanically-induced transparency (OMIT) and the associated slowing of light provide the basis for storing photons in nanoscale devices. Here we study OMIT in parity-time (PT)-symmetric microresonators with a tunable gain-to-loss ratio. This system features a sideband-reversed, non-amplifying transparency , i.e., an inverted-OMIT. When the gain-to-loss ratio is varied, the system exhibits a transition from a PT-symmetric phase to a broken-PT-symmetric phase. This PT-phase transition results in the reversal of the pump and gain dependence of the transmission rates. Moreover, we show that by tuning the pump power at a fixed gain-to-loss ratio, or the gain-to-loss ratio at a fixed pump power, one can switch from slow to fast light and vice versa. These findings provide new tools for controlling light propagation using nanofabricated phononic devices.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

PT-Symmetry-Breaking Chaos in Optomechanics

Xin-You Lü; Hui Jing; Jinyong Ma; Ying Wu

We demonstrate PT-symmetry-breaking chaos in an optomechanical system, which features an ultralow driving threshold. In principle, this chaos will emerge once a driving laser is applied to the cavity mode and lasts for a period of time. The driving strength is inversely proportional to the starting time of chaos. This originally comes from the dynamical enhancement of nonlinearity by field localization in the PT-symmetry-breaking phase. Moreover, this chaos is switchable by tuning the system parameters so that a PT-symmetry phase transition occurs. This work may fundamentally broaden the regimes of cavity optomechanics and nonlinear optics. It offers the prospect of exploring ultralow-power-laser-triggered chaos and its potential applications in secret communication.


Physical Review A | 2015

Steady-state mechanical squeezing in an optomechanical system via Duffing nonlinearity

Xin-You Lü; Jie-Qiao Liao; Lin Tian; Franco Nori

Quantum squeezing in mechanical systems is not only a key signature of macroscopic quantum effects, but can also be utilized to advance the metrology of weak forces. Here we show that strong mechanical squeezing in the steady state can be generated in an optomechanical system with mechanical nonlinearity and red-detuned monochromatic driving on the cavity mode. The squeezing is achieved as the joint effect of nonlinearity-induced parametric amplification and cavity cooling and is robust against thermal fluctuations of the mechanical mode. We also show that the mechanical squeezing can be detected via an ancilla cavity mode.


Physical Review B | 2013

Hybrid quantum circuit consisting of a superconducting flux qubit coupled to a spin ensemble and a transmission-line resonator

T. Li; J. Q. You; Ze-Liang Xiang; Xin-You Lü; Franco Nori

We propose an experimentally realizable hybrid quantum circuit for achieving a strong coupling between a spin ensemble and a transmission-line resonator via a superconducting flux qubit used as a data bus. The resulting coupling can be used to transfer quantum information between the spin ensemble and the resonator. In particular, in contrast to the direct coupling without a data bus, our approach requires far less spins to achieve a strong coupling between the spin ensemble and the resonator (e.g., three to four orders of magnitude less). This proposed hybrid quantum circuit could enable a long-time quantum memory when storing information in the spin ensemble, and allows the possibility to explore nonlinear effects in the ultrastrong-coupling regime.


Physical Review A | 2013

Quantum memory using a hybrid circuit with flux qubits and nitrogen-vacancy centers

J. Q. You; Xin-You Lü; Ze-Liang Xiang; Wei Cui; Franco Nori

We propose how to realize high-fidelity quantum storage using a hybrid quantum architecture including two coupled flux qubits and a nitrogen-vacancy center ensemble (NVE). One of the flux qubits is considered as the quantum computing processor and the NVE serves as the quantum memory. By separating the computing and memory units, the influence of the quantum computing process on the quantum memory can be effectively eliminated, and hence the quantum storage of an arbitrary quantum state of the computing qubit could be achieved with high fidelity. Furthermore the present proposal is robust with respect to fluctuations of the system parameters, and it is experimentally feasibile with currently available technology.


Physical Review B | 2015

Giant nonlinearity via breaking parity-time symmetry: A route to low-threshold phonon diodes

Jing Zhang; Lan Yang; Yu-xi Liu; Şahin Kaya Özdemir; Bo Peng; Xin-You Lü; Hui Jing; Yu-Long Liu; Franco Nori

Nonreciprocal devices that permit wave transmission in only one direction are indispensible in many fields of science including, e.g., electronics, optics, acoustics, and thermodynamics. Manipulating phonons using such nonreciprocal devices may have a range of applications such as phonon diodes, transistors, switches, etc. One way of achieving nonreciprocal phononic devices is to use materials with strong nonlinear response to phonons. However, it is not easy to obtain the required strong mechanical nonlinearity, especially for few-phonon situations. Here, we present a general mechanism to amplify nonlinearity using


Scientific Reports | 2016

Controllable chaos in hybrid electro-optomechanical systems

Mei Wang; Xin-You Lü; Jinyong Ma; Hao Xiong; Liu-Gang Si; Ying Wu

\mathcal{PT}


Physical Review A | 2016

Macroscopic quantum entanglement in modulated optomechanics

Mei Wang; Xin-You Lü; Ying-Dan Wang; J. Q. You; Ying Wu

-symmetric structures, and show that an on-chip micro-scale phonon diode can be fabricated using a

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Franco Nori

University of Michigan

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Ying Wu

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Hui Jing

Hunan Normal University

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Jiahua Li

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Xiaoxue Yang

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Mei Wang

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Ji-Bing Liu

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Lan Yang

Washington University in St. Louis

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