RESUMEN
We used a surface acoustic wave (SAW) cavity resonator to study the coupling of acoustic magnons in a synthetic antiferromagnet (SAF) and phonons carried by SAWs. The SAF is composed of a CoFeB/Ru/CoFeB trilayer, and the scattering matrix of the SAW resonator is studied to assess the coupling. We find that the spectral line width of the SAW resonator is modulated when the frequency of the excited magnons approaches the SAW resonance frequency. Such a change in the spectral linewidth can be well reproduced using macrospin-like model calculations. From the model analyses, we estimate the magnon-phonon coupling strength to be â¼9.9 MHz at a SAW resonance frequency of 1.8 GHz: the corresponding magnomechanical cooperativity is â¼0.66. As the spectral shape hardly changes in a CoFeB single-layer reference sample, these results show that SAF provides an ideal platform to study magnon-phonon coupling in an SAW cavity resonator.
RESUMEN
We suggest a method to improve quantum correlations in cavity magnomechanics, through the use of a coherent feedback loop and magnon squeezing. The entanglement of three bipartition subsystems: photon-phonon, photon-magnon, and phonon-magnon, is significantly improved by the coherent feedback-control method that has been proposed. In addition, we investigate Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering under thermal effects in each of the subsystems. We also evaluate the scheme's performance and sensitivity to magnon squeezing. Furthermore, we study the comparison between entanglement and Gaussian quantum discord in both steady and dynamical states.
RESUMEN
Squeezed light finds many important applications in quantum information science and quantum metrology, and has been produced in a variety of physical systems involving optical non-linear processes. Here, we show how a non-linear magnetostrictive interaction in a ferrimagnet in cavity magnomechanics can be used to reduce quantum noise of the electromagnetic field. We show optimal parameter regimes where a substantial and stationary squeezing of the microwave output field can be achieved. Realization of the scheme is within reach of current technology in cavity electromagnonics and magnomechanics. Our work provides a new and practicable approach for producing squeezed vacuum states of electromagnetic fields, and may find promising applications in quantum information processing and quantum metrology.