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15 - Advanced techniques: recycling and squeezing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2009

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

Introduction to recycling

All the long baseline interferometers for the detection of gravitational radiation which are presently being studied are based on the construction of a large, Michelson-like interferometer with an armlength of 1 to 4 km, containing some kind of gravito-optic transducer in each arm. In order to improve the shot-noise limited sensitivity, all these interferometers will use high-power lasers, in conjunction with so-called light recycling techniques. The basic idea of recycling was proposed by R. W. P. Drever (1983): it consists in building a resonant optical cavity which contains the interferometer, so that, if the losses are low and if the cavity is kept on resonance with the incoming monochromatic light, there is a power build-up which results in a reduction of the shot noise. This can be realized in different ways, depending on the geometry of the gravito-optic transducer (delay line or Fabry-Perot).

A general theory of recycling interferometers was recently developed and published (Vinet et al, 1988) and the Garching (Schnupp, 1987) and Orsay (Man, 1987) groups have obtained the first experimental verifications of the efficiency of this technique. In this chapter, we first remind the reader of the main ideas and results of the theory, which is fully expressed in Vinet et al. (1988). We then describe today's experimental achievements, and we end up with a short discussion of possible future improvements.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1991

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