Gravitational wave detectors with broadband high frequency sensitivity

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作者
Michael A. Page
Maxim Goryachev
Haixing Miao
Yanbei Chen
Yiqiu Ma
David Mason
Massimiliano Rossi
Carl D. Blair
Li Ju
David G. Blair
Albert Schliesser
Michael E. Tobar
Chunnong Zhao
机构
[1] University of Western Australia,Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery
[2] National Astronomical Observatory of Japan,Gravitational Waves Science Project
[3] University of Western Australia,Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems
[4] University of Birmingham,Astrophysics and Space Research Group
[5] California Institute of Technology,Theoretical Astrophysics
[6] Huazhong University of Science and Technology,Centre for Gravitational Experiment, School of Physics
[7] Yale University,Yale Quantum Institute
[8] University of Copenhagen,Niels Bohr Institute
[9] University of Copenhagen,Denmark National Research Foundation Centre of Excellence for Hybrid Quantum Networks
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Gravitational waves from the neutron star coalescence GW170817 were observed from the inspiral, but not the high frequency postmerger nuclear matter motion. Optomechanical white light signal recycling has been proposed for achieving broadband sensitivity in gravitational wave detectors, but has been reliant on development of suitable ultra-low loss mechanical components. Here we show demonstrated optomechanical resonators that meet loss requirements for a white light signal recycling interferometer with strain sensitivity below 10−24 Hz−1/2 at a few kHz. Experimental data for two resonators are combined with analytic models of interferometers similar to LIGO to demonstrate enhancement across a broader band of frequencies versus dual-recycled Fabry-Perot Michelson detectors. Candidate resonators are a silicon nitride membrane acoustically isolated by a phononic crystal, and a single-crystal quartz acoustic cavity. Optical power requirements favour the membrane resonator, while thermal noise performance favours the quartz resonator. Both could be implemented as add-on components to existing detectors.
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