901 research outputs found
Sub-SQL Sensitivity via Optical Rigidity in Advanced LIGO Interferometer with Optical Losses
The ``optical springs'' regime of the signal-recycled configuration of laser
interferometric gravitational-wave detectors is analyzed taking in account
optical losses in the interferometer arm cavities. This regime allows to obtain
sensitivity better than the Standard Quantum Limits both for a free test mass
and for a conventional harmonic oscillator. The optical losses restrict the
gain in sensitivity and achievable signal-to-noise ratio. Nevertheless, for
parameters values planned for the Advanced LIGO gravitational-wave detector,
this restriction is insignificant.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
Coating thermal noise for arbitrary shaped beams
Advanced LIGO's sensitivity will be limited by coating noise. Though this
noise depends on beam shape, and though nongaussian beams are being seriously
considered for advanced LIGO, no published analysis exists to compare the
quantitative thermal noise improvement alternate beams offer. In this paper, we
derive and discuss a simple integral which completely characterizes the
dependence of coating thermal noise on shape. The derivation used applies
equally well, with minor modifications, to all other forms of thermal noise in
the low-frequency limit.Comment: 3 pages. Originally performed in August 2004. Submitted to CQG. (v2)
: Corrections from referee and other
Spontaneous crystallization noise in mirrors of gravitational wave detectors
Core optics components for high precision measurements are made of stable
materials, having small optical and mechanical dissipation. The natural choice
in many cases is glass, in particular fused silica. Glass is a solid amorphous
state of material that couldn't become a crystal due to high viscosity. However
thermodynamically or externally activated stimulated local processes of
spontaneous crystallization (known as devitrification) are still possible.
Being random, these processes can produce an additional noise, and influence
the performance of such experiments as laser gravitational wave detection.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Sensitivity of a cavityless optomechanical system
We study the possibility of revealing a weak coherent force by using a
pendular mirror as a probe, and coupling this to a radiation field, which acts
as the meter, in a cavityless configuration. We determine the sensitivity of
such a scheme and show that the use of an entangled meter state greatly
improves the ultimate detection limit. We also compare this scheme with that
involving an optical cavity.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex file, 2 eps figures, provisionally accepted by Phys.
Rev.
Speed Meter As a Quantum Nondemolition Measuring Device for Force
Quantum noise is an important issue for advanced LIGO. Although it is in
principle possible to beat the Standard Quantum Limit (SQL), no practical
recipe has been found yet. This paper dicusses quantum noise in the context of
speedmeter-a devise monitoring the speed of the testmass. The scheme proposed
to overcome SQL in this case might be more practical than the methods based on
monitoring position of the testmass.Comment: 7 pages of RevTex, 1 postscript figur
How to reduce the suspension thermal noise in LIGO without improving the Q's of the pendulum and violin modes
The suspension noise in interferometric gravitational wave detectors is
caused by losses at the top and the bottom attachments of each suspension
fiber. We use the Fluctuation-Dissipation theorem to argue that by careful
positioning of the laser beam spot on the mirror face it is possible to reduce
the contribution of the bottom attachment point to the suspension noise by
several orders of magnitude. For example, for the initial and enhanced LIGO
design parameters (i.e. mirror masses and sizes, and suspension fibers' lengths
and diameters) we predict a reduction of in the "bottom" spectral
density throughout the band of serious thermal noise. We then
propose a readout scheme which suppresses the suspension noise contribution of
the top attachment point. The idea is to monitor an averaged horizontal
displacement of the fiber of length ; this allows one to record the
contribution of the top attachment point to the suspension noise, and later
subtract it it from the interferometer readout. For enhanced LIGO this would
allow a suppression factor about 100 in spectral density of suspension thermal
noise.Comment: a few misprints corrected; submitted to Classical and Quantum Gravit
Conversion of conventional gravitational-wave interferometers into QND interferometers by modifying their input and/or output optics
The LIGO-II gravitational-wave interferometers (ca. 2006--2008) are designed
to have sensitivities at about the standard quantum limit (SQL) near 100 Hz.
This paper describes and analyzes possible designs for subsequent, LIGO-III
interferometers that can beat the SQL. These designs are identical to a
conventional broad-band interferometer (without signal recycling), except for
new input and/or output optics. Three designs are analyzed: (i) a
"squeezed-input interferometer" (conceived by Unruh based on earlier work of
Caves) in which squeezed vacuum with frequency-dependent (FD) squeeze angle is
injected into the interferometer's dark port; (ii) a "variational-output"
interferometer (conceived in a different form by Vyatchanin, Matsko and
Zubova), in which homodyne detection with FD homodyne phase is performed on the
output light; and (iii) a "squeezed-variational interferometer" with squeezed
input and FD-homodyne output. It is shown that the FD squeezed-input light can
be produced by sending ordinary squeezed light through two successive
Fabry-Perot filter cavities before injection into the interferometer, and
FD-homodyne detection can be achieved by sending the output light through two
filter cavities before ordinary homodyne detection. With anticipated technology
and with laser powers comparable to that planned for LIGO-II, these
interferometers can beat the amplitude SQL by factors in the range from 3 to 5,
corresponding to event rate increases between ~30 and ~100 over the rate for a
SQL-limited interferometer.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review D; RevTeX manuscript with 16 figures;
prints to 33 pages in Physical Review double column format. Minor revisions
have been made in response to referee repor
Quantum statistical properties of the radiation field in a cavity with a movable mirror
A quantum system composed of a cavity radiation field interacting with a
movable mirror is considered and quantum statistical properties of the field
are studied. Such a system can serve in principle as an idealized meter for
detection of a weak classical force coupled to the mirror which is modelled by
a quantum harmonic oscillator. It is shown that the standard quantum limit on
the measurement of the mirror position arises naturally from the properties of
the system during its dynamical evolution. However, the force detection
sensitivity of the system falls short of the corresponding standard quantum
limit. We also study the effect of the nonlinear interaction between the moving
mirror and the radiation pressure on the quadrature fluctuations of the
initially coherent cavity field.Comment: REVTeX, 9 pages, 5 figures. More info on
http://www.ligo.caltech.edu/~cbrif/science.htm
Dual-Resonator Speed Meter for a Free Test Mass
A description and analysis are given of a ``speed meter'' for monitoring a
classical force that acts on a test mass. This speed meter is based on two
microwave resonators (``dual resonators''), one of which couples evanescently
to the position of the test mass. The sloshing of the resulting signal between
the resonators, and a wise choice of where to place the resonators' output
waveguide, produce a signal in the waveguide that (for sufficiently low
frequencies) is proportional to the test-mass velocity (speed) rather than its
position. This permits the speed meter to achieve force-measurement
sensitivities better than the standard quantum limit (SQL), both when operating
in a narrow-band mode and a wide-band mode. A scrutiny of experimental issues
shows that it is feasible, with current technology, to construct a
demonstration speed meter that beats the wide-band SQL by a factor 2. A concept
is sketched for an adaptation of this speed meter to optical frequencies; this
adaptation forms the basis for a possible LIGO-III interferometer that could
beat the gravitational-wave standard quantum limit h_SQL, but perhaps only by a
factor 1/xi = h_SQL/h ~ 3 (constrained by losses in the optics) and at the
price of a very high circulating optical power --- larger by 1/xi^2 than that
required to reach the SQL.Comment: RevTex: 13 pages with 4 embedded figures (two .eps format and two
drawn in TeX); Submitted to Physical Review
Quantum noise in second generation, signal-recycled laser interferometric gravitational-wave detectors
It has long been thought that the sensitivity of laser interferometric
gravitational-wave detectors is limited by the free-mass standard quantum
limit, unless radical redesigns of the interferometers or modifications of
their input/output optics are introduced. Within a fully quantum-mechanical
approach we show that in a second-generation interferometer composed of arm
cavities and a signal recycling cavity, e.g., the LIGO-II configuration, (i)
quantum shot noise and quantum radiation-pressure-fluctuation noise are
dynamically correlated, (ii) the noise curve exhibits two resonant dips, (iii)
the Standard Quantum Limit can be beaten by a factor of 2, over a frequency
range \Delta f/f \sim 1, but at the price of increasing noise at lower
frequencies.Comment: 35 pages, 9 figures; few misprints corrected and some references
adde
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