Long-Axis Spinning of an Optically Levitated Particle: A Levitated Spinning Top

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DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.132.253601
Reference J.A. Zielińska, F. van der Laan, A. Norrman, R. Reimann, M. Frimmer and L. Novotny, Long-Axis Spinning of an Optically Levitated Particle: A Levitated Spinning Top, Phys.Rev.Lett. 132, (25), 253601: 1-6 (2024)
Group Photonic Forces

An elongated object can be rotated around one of its short axes, like a propeller, or around its long axis, like a spinning top. Using optically levitated nanoparticles, short-axis rotation and libration have been systematically investigated in several recent studies. Notably, short-axis rotational degrees of freedom have been cooled to millikelvin temperatures and driven into gigahertz rotational speeds. However, controlled long-axis spinning has so far remained an unrealized goal. Here, we demonstrate controlled long-axis spinning of an optically levitated nanodumbbell with spinning rates exceeding 1 GHz. We show that the damping rate in high vacuum can be as low as a few millihertz. Our results open up applications in inertial torque sensing and studies of rotational quantum interference.