Influence of gravitational waves upon light in the Minkowski background: from null geodesics to interferometry
Jo\~ao C. Lobato, Isabela S. Matos, Lucas T. Santana, Ribamar R. R., Reis, Maur\'icio O. Calv\~ao

TL;DR
This paper derives a covariant framework for analyzing how gravitational waves influence light in interferometers, revealing new subtle effects and providing explicit formulas for the interference pattern in a Minkowski background.
Contribution
It introduces a covariant evolution law for light in gravitational fields and derives a comprehensive expression for the interference pattern, including previously overlooked effects.
Findings
New expression for interference pattern including Doppler and divergence effects
Quantitative analysis showing these effects are negligible in geometrical optics regime
Explicit formulas for null geodesics and electric field in interferometric setups
Abstract
We have recently derived a manifestly covariant evolution law, under the geometrical optics approximation of the vacuum Maxwell's equations, for the electric field along null geodesics in a general spacetime, relative to an arbitrary set of instantaneous observers [arXiv:2004.03496]. As one of its applications, we derive here the final detected intensity signal arising from a prototypical laser interferometric gravitational wave (GW) Michelson-Morley detector, comoving with transverse traceless (TT) observers, valid for both long and short GW wavelengths. One of our main results is the presentation of the integrated null geodesic parametric equations exchanged between two TT observers in terms of explicitly observable quantities and the profile of the plane GW packet. This allows us to revisit the derivation of the consequential radar distance and Doppler shift, taking the opportunity…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
