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We report on nanomechanical resonators with very high-quality factors operated as mechanical probes in liquid helium (^4mathrm{He}), with special attention to the superfluid regime down to millikelvin temperatures. Such resonators have been used to map out the full range of damping mechanisms in the liquid on the nanometer scale from (10,mathrm{mK}) up to (sim3,mathrm{K}). The high sensitivity of these doubly-clamped beams to thermal excitations in the superfluid (^4mathrm{He}) makes it possible to drive them using the momentum transfer from phonons generated by a nearby heater. This so-called textit{phonon wind} is an inverse thermomechanical effect that until now has never been demonstrated, and provides the possibility to perform a new type of optomechanical experiments in quantum fluids.
Nanoscale mechanical resonators are widely utilized to provide high sensitivity force detectors. Here we demonstrate that such high quality factor resonators immersed in superfluid (^4mathrm{He}) can be excited by a modulated flux of phonons. A nanos
State of the art nanomechanical resonators present quality factors Q ~ 10^3 - 10^5, which are much lower than those that can be naively extrapolated from the behavior of micromechanical resonators. We analyze the dissipation mechanism that arises in
Flexural mode vibrations of miniature piezoelectric tuning forks (TF) are known to be highly sensitive to superfluid excitations and quantum turbulence in $mathrm{^3He}$ and $mathrm{^4He}$ quantum fluids, as well as to the elastic properties of solid
High-resolution neutron resonance spin-echo measurements of superfluid 4He show that the roton energy does not have the same temperature dependence as the inverse lifetime. Diagrammatic analysis attributes this to the interaction of rotons with therm
We propose and experimentally demonstrate a technique for coupling phonons out of an optomechanical crystal cavity. By designing a perturbation that breaks a symmetry in the elastic structure, we selectively induce phonon leakage without affecting th