Because of their small decay rates, nanomechanical modes enable studying strongly nonlinear phenomena for
a moderately strong resonant driving. Here we study the response of a driven resonator to an additional probe
field. We experimentally demonstrate resonant amplification and resonant absorption of the probe field. The
corresponding spectral peaks lie on the opposite sides of the strong-drive frequency. Even though the fluctuation dissipation theorem does not apply, we show that the response to the probe field allows us to characterize the
squeezing of fluctuations about the stable states of forced oscillations. Our two-tone experiment is done in
the classical regime, but our findings should equally apply to quantum fluctuations as well. In quantum terms, the
observed response is due to multiphoton processes. The squeezing parameter extracted from the spectra of the
response is in excellent agreement with the calculated value with no free parameters.
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Because of their small decay rates, nanomechanical modes enable studying strongly nonlinear phenomena for
a moderately strong resonant driving. Here we study the response of a driven resonator to an additional probe
field. We experimentally demonstrate resonant amplification and resonant absorption of the probe field. The
corresponding spectral peaks lie on the opposite sides of the strong-drive frequency. Even though the fluctuation dissipation theorem does not apply, we show that the respon...
»