English

Gravitational Wave Detection with Atom Interferometry

General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology 2009-06-22 v2 Astrophysics High Energy Physics - Phenomenology High Energy Physics - Theory Atomic Physics

Abstract

We propose two distinct atom interferometer gravitational wave detectors, one terrestrial and another satellite-based, utilizing the core technology of the Stanford 10m10 \text{m} atom interferometer presently under construction. The terrestrial experiment can operate with strain sensitivity 1019Hz \sim \frac{10^{-19}}{\sqrt{\text{Hz}}} in the 1 Hz - 10 Hz band, inaccessible to LIGO, and can detect gravitational waves from solar mass binaries out to megaparsec distances. The satellite experiment probes the same frequency spectrum as LISA with better strain sensitivity 1020Hz \sim \frac{10^{-20}}{\sqrt{\text{Hz}}}. Each configuration compares two widely separated atom interferometers run using common lasers. The effect of the gravitational waves on the propagating laser field produces the main effect in this configuration and enables a large enhancement in the gravitational wave signal while significantly suppressing many backgrounds. The use of ballistic atoms (instead of mirrors) as inertial test masses improves systematics coming from vibrations and acceleration noise, and reduces spacecraft control requirements.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0712.1250,
  title  = {Gravitational Wave Detection with Atom Interferometry},
  author = {Savas Dimopoulos and Peter W. Graham and Jason M. Hogan and Mark A. Kasevich and Surjeet Rajendran},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0712.1250},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

5 pages, 5 figures, updated with journal reference

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:51:56.110Z