Do Mirrors for Gravitational Waves Exist?
Stephen J. Minter, Kirk Wegter-McNelly, Raymond Y. Chiao

TL;DR
This paper proposes that superconducting films can act as highly reflective mirrors for gravitational waves at microwave frequencies due to quantum effects causing non-geodesic motion and charge separation, leading to strong interactions.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of superconducting films as gravitational wave mirrors based on quantum non-localizability and charge separation effects, supported by theoretical models.
Findings
Superconducting films can reflect gravitational microwaves.
Quantum effects induce strong mass and charge supercurrents.
Charge separation enhances interaction with gravitational waves.
Abstract
Thin superconducting films are predicted to be highly reflective mirrors for gravitational waves at microwave frequencies. The quantum mechanical non-localizability of the negatively charged Cooper pairs, which is protected from the localizing effect of decoherence by an energy gap, causes the pairs to undergo non-picturable, non-geodesic motion in the presence of a gravitational wave. This non-geodesic motion, which is accelerated motion through space, leads to the existence of mass and charge supercurrents inside the superconducting film. On the other hand, the decoherence-induced localizability of the positively charged ions in the lattice causes them to undergo picturable, geodesic motion as they are carried along with space in the presence of the same gravitational wave. The resulting separation of charges leads to a virtual plasma excitation within the film that enormously…
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