Quantum properties are usually not observable in macroscopic objects due to environmental decoherence unless specific sample geometries and cooling are utilized. Employing microcavities, for example, is one possibility to observe quantum effects in a relatively large, micrometer-scaled structure. The image illustrates an isolated, donut-shaped glass microcavity of about 30 microns in diameter. With this geometry, it is a macroscopic mechanical oscillator and a ring-shaped high Q optical cavity at the same time: light of certain wavelengths can be coupled into it via evanescent wave coupling. The oscillating light bounces off the walls of the donut by total internal reflection and thus transfers a small force on the structure by radiation pressure.
In this way, the coupled light can influence the vibrational behavior of the structure and vice versa. This turns microcavities into interesting objects for quantum research. For example, in [1] such parametric coupling between light and mechanical oscillations was observed. In [2] a sensor that is based on optomechanical coupling was used for active feedback cooling of such a microcavity.
Because of their small size, the free spectral range of microcavities is relatively large, and tiny size deviations cause large spectral shifts. Hence, a widely mode-hop-free tunable laser is an invaluable tool to find and study the resonance frequencies of microcavities.
The spectral dependence on size and other environmental parameters of microcavities can be exploited for a promising application: label-free detection of single biological molecules in solution. This is enabled using a microtoroid optical resonator in combination with a widely tunable mode-hop-free laser like CTL. In [3] it is described how such a laser is stabilized to a microtoroid optical resonator and how shifts of the optical resonance frequency caused by molecules binding to the resonator are observed. The laser follows the frequency change and by examining the shift in laser frequency, particles of radius between 2 nm and 100 nm can be detected and distinguished.