3 research outputs found
Design of a dual species atom interferometer for space
Atom interferometers have a multitude of proposed applications in space
including precise measurements of the Earth's gravitational field, in
navigation & ranging, and in fundamental physics such as tests of the weak
equivalence principle (WEP) and gravitational wave detection. While atom
interferometers are realized routinely in ground-based laboratories, current
efforts aim at the development of a space compatible design optimized with
respect to dimensions, weight, power consumption, mechanical robustness and
radiation hardness. In this paper, we present a design of a high-sensitivity
differential dual species Rb/Rb atom interferometer for space,
including physics package, laser system, electronics and software. The physics
package comprises the atom source consisting of dispensers and a 2D
magneto-optical trap (MOT), the science chamber with a 3D-MOT, a magnetic trap
based on an atom chip and an optical dipole trap (ODT) used for Bose-Einstein
condensate (BEC) creation and interferometry, the detection unit, the vacuum
system for mbar ultra-high vacuum generation, and the
high-suppression factor magnetic shielding as well as the thermal control
system. The laser system is based on a hybrid approach using fiber-based
telecom components and high-power laser diode technology and includes all laser
sources for 2D-MOT, 3D-MOT, ODT, interferometry and detection. Manipulation and
switching of the laser beams is carried out on an optical bench using Zerodur
bonding technology. The instrument consists of 9 units with an overall mass of
221 kg, an average power consumption of 608 W (819 W peak), and a volume of 470
liters which would well fit on a satellite to be launched with a Soyuz rocket,
as system studies have shown.Comment: 30 pages, 23 figures, accepted for publication in Experimental
Astronom
Laser Interferometer Space Antenna
Following the selection of The Gravitational Universe by ESA, and the
successful flight of LISA Pathfinder, the LISA Consortium now proposes a 4 year
mission in response to ESA's call for missions for L3. The observatory will be
based on three arms with six active laser links, between three identical
spacecraft in a triangular formation separated by 2.5 million km.
LISA is an all-sky monitor and will offer a wide view of a dynamic cosmos
using Gravitational Waves as new and unique messengers to unveil The
Gravitational Universe. It provides the closest ever view of the infant
Universe at TeV energy scales, has known sources in the form of verification
binaries in the Milky Way, and can probe the entire Universe, from its smallest
scales near the horizons of black holes, all the way to cosmological scales.
The LISA mission will scan the entire sky as it follows behind the Earth in its
orbit, obtaining both polarisations of the Gravitational Waves simultaneously,
and will measure source parameters with astrophysically relevant sensitivity in
a band from below Hz to above Hz.Comment: Submitted to ESA on January 13th in response to the call for missions
for the L3 slot in the Cosmic Vision Programm