Experimental determination of gravitomagnetic effects by means of ring lasers
Angelo Tartaglia (Politecnico di Torino, INFN)

TL;DR
The paper discusses the GINGER experiment, which uses ring laser gyroscopes to detect Earth's gravitomagnetic effects, aiming to improve sensitivity and confirm frame-dragging predictions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel experimental setup with a 3D array of ring lasers to measure Earth's gravitomagnetic effects with enhanced sensitivity.
Findings
Current laser technology is close to detecting gravitomagnetic effects.
The experiment aims to improve sensitivity by two orders of magnitude.
The setup will be located underground at Gran Sasso, Italy.
Abstract
A new experiment aimed to the detection of the gravito-magnetic Lense-Thirring effect at the surface of the Earth will be presented; the name of the experiment is GINGER. The proposed technique is based on the behavior of light beams in ring lasers, also known as gyrolasers. A three-dimensional array of ringlasers will be attached to a rigid monument; each ring will have a different orientation in space. Within the space-time of a rotating mass the propagation of light is indeed anisotropic; part of the anisotropy is purely kinematical (Sagnac effect), part is due to the interaction between the gravito-electric field of the source and the kinematical motion of the observer (de Sitter effect), finally there is a contribution from the gravito-magnetic component of the Earth (gravito-magnetic frame dragging or Lense-Thirring effect). In a ring laser a light beam traveling counterclockwise…
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