Surpassing the Standard Quantum Limit using an Optical Spring
Torrey Cullen, Scott Aronson, Ron Pagano, Jonathan Cripe, Safura, Sharifi, Michelle Lollie, Henry Cain, Paula Heu, David Follman, Garrett D, Cole, Nancy Aggarwal, Thomas Corbitt

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a method using an optical spring to achieve measurement sensitivity below the standard quantum limit, enhancing gravitational wave detection capabilities.
Contribution
The authors extend previous work by achieving nearly 2.8 dB sensitivity below the SQL using an optical spring, applicable to advanced interferometric detectors like LIGO.
Findings
Sensitivity below SQL by 2.8 dB achieved
Noise power reduced by 72% below quantum limit
Technique tunable for specific frequency ranges
Abstract
Quantum mechanics places noise limits and sensitivity restrictions on physical measurements. The balance between unwanted backaction and the precision of optical measurements impose a standard quantum limit (SQL) on interferometric systems. In order to realize a sensitivity below the SQL, it is necessary to leverage a back-action evading measurement technique, or else exploit cancellations of any excess noise contributions at the detector. %Many proof of principle experiments have been performed, but only recently has an experiment achieved sensitivity below the SQL. In this work, we extend that initial demonstration and realize sub-SQL measurement sensitivity nearly two times better than previous measurements, and with architecture applicable to interferometric gravitational wave detectors. In fact, this technique is directly applicable to Advanced LIGO, which could observe similar…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
