[gr-qc/0610117] Isolation of gravitational waves from displacement noise and utility of a time-delay device

Authors: Kentaro Somiya, Keisuke Goda, Yanbei Chen, Eugeniy E. Mikhailov

Date: Wed, 25 Oct 2006

Abstract: Interferometers with kilometer-scale arms have been built for gravitational-wave detections on the ground; ones with much longer arms are being planned for space-based detection. One fundamental motivation for long baseline interferometry is from displacement noise. In general, the longer the arm length L, the larger the motion the gravitational-wave induces on the test masses, until L becomes comparable to the gravitational wavelength. Recently, schemes have been invented, in which displacement noises can be evaded by employing differences between the influence of test-mass motions and that of gravitational waves on light propagation. However, in these schemes, such differences only becomes significant when L approaches the gravitational wavelength, and shot-noise limited sensitivity becomes worse than that of conventional configurations by a factor of at least (f L/c)ˆ(-2), for f<c/L. Such a factor, although can be overcome theoretically by employing high optical powers, makes these schemes quite impractical. In this paper, we explore the use of time delay in displacement-noise-free interferometers, which can improve their shot-noise-limited sensitivity at low frequencies, to a factor of (f L/c)ˆ(-1) of the shot-noise-limited sensitivity of conventional configurations.

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Oct 25, 2006

0610117 (/preprints/gr-qc)
2006-10-25, 20:38 [edit]

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