Noise-induced temporal regularity and signal amplification in an optomechanical system with parametric instability

2018 
Noise usually has an unwelcome influence on system performance. For instance, noise inevitably affects the low-frequency mechanical freedom in optomechanical experiments. However, we investigate here the beneficial effects of thermal noise on a basic optomechanical system with parametric instability. In a regime near parametric instability, it is found that thermal noise in the mechanical freedom can sustain long-term quasi-coherent oscillations when the system would otherwise remain in the equilibrium state. In an overlapping regime of parametric instability and bistability, intermittent switching between a self-sustained oscillating state and an equilibrium can be induced by adding a certain amount of noise. When a subthreshold periodic signal is applied to the mechanics, the switching between the self-sustained oscillations and the equilibrium exhibits good periodicity at a rate that is synchronized to the signal frequency, resulting in a significant amplification of the signal. Our results deepen the understanding of the interplay between optomechanical nonlinearity and noise and provide theoretical guidance for experimental observation of noise-induced beneficial phenomena in optomechanics.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    38
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []