NOTICE: Due to a lapse in annual appropriations, most of this website is not being updated. Learn more.
Form submissions will still be accepted but will not receive responses at this time. Sections of this site for programs using non-appropriated funds (such as NVLAP) or those that are excepted from the shutdown (such as CHIPS and NVD) will continue to be updated.
An official website of the United States government
Here’s how you know
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock (
) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.
Femtometer-amplitude imaging of coherent super high frequency vibrations in micromechanical resonators
Published
Author(s)
Lei Shao, Vikrant Gokhale, Bo Peng, Peng-Hui Song, Jingjie Cheng, Justin Kuo, Amit Lal, Wen-Ming Zhang, Jason Gorman
Abstract
The ability to measure femtometer scale vibrations at microwave frequencies is important in applications as diverse as ultracoherent resonators for 5G wireless communications, ultrasensitive detectors for mass and force, and acoustic resonators for quantum memory and state transfer. However, the resolution of state-of-the-art optical interferometry has been limited to sub-picometer vibrations at several gigahertz (GHz), which is insufficient since vibration amplitudes typically get smaller as frequency increases. Here we present a stroboscopic optical sampling approach to the transduction of coherent super high frequency vibrations, and demonstrate phase-sensitive absolute displacement detection with a noise floor of 55 fm/√Hz for frequencies up to 12 GHz, achieving a much higher bandwidth and significantly lower noise level simultaneously. This approach allows for the detection of several tens to hundreds of coherent acoustic phonons in a nanoresonator, with the potential for detecting near quantized oscillation. An acoustic resonator with resonances above 10 GHz and with displacements of only several tens of femtometer is imaged to reveal complex mode superposition and dispersion.
Shao, L.
, Gokhale, V.
, Peng, B.
, Song, P.
, Cheng, J.
, Kuo, J.
, Lal, A.
, Zhang, W.
and Gorman, J.
(2022),
Femtometer-amplitude imaging of coherent super high frequency vibrations in micromechanical resonators, Nature Communications, [online], https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28223-w , https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=930877
(Accessed October 9, 2025)