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12 - Fabry-Perot cavity gravity-wave detectors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2009

David G. Blair
Affiliation:
University of Western Australia, Perth
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Summary

Introduction

The gravitational wave detection technique discussed here is a long-baseline nearly-free-mass technique, devised initially with the aim of obtaining high gravity-wave sensitivity with minimum practicable cost. The distinctive part of the technique is the use as sensors of a pair of optical cavities formed between mirrors attached to test masses defining two perpendicular baselines, illuminated by an external laser source. To introduce the basic concept it may be useful to summarize the train of ideas which led up to it.

Experience and analyses in the early 1970s of resonant-bar gravity-wave detectors indicated that, although it is in principle possible to achieve by this technique the high sensitivity likely to be required for detection of expected astronomical sources, the small energy exchange with the gravitational wave leads to increasingly difficult experimental problems as sensitivity is improved. Alternative techniques using free test masses at large separations, monitored by optical or microwave methods, can sample much larger baselines and make relatively less serious any thermal, seismic, and amplifier noise, as well as the uncertaintyprinciple quantum limit for the test masses. Measurement of the small relative displacements involved, which might correspond at 1 kHz to strains of order one part in 1021 or less in a 1 kHz bandwidth, is however a serious challenge for interferometers of any kind. If a simple Michelson interferometer were used the photon shot noise limit would demand an impracticably high light flux. One way of improving sensitivity was proposed by R.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1991

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