APS Logo

Extending the Astrophysical Reach of Gravitational-Wave Detectors through New Adaptive Optical Technology

ORAL

Abstract

We present a new adaptive optical technology called FROSTI with the potential to expand the detection horizon of the current gravitational-wave observatories such as LIGO. FROSTI provides high-precision, low-noise wavefront actuation on the core interferometer optics to mitigate the limiting impact of thermal distortions due to coating absorption, beyond current thermal compensation capabilities. It can enable significantly higher levels of laser power buildup and improved quantum squeezing performance in gravitational-wave detectors, resulting in a greater quantum-noise-limited sensitivity. In simulated projections for achieving and exceeding the LIGO A+ design sensitivity, we find that this technology can reduce the quantum-limited noise floor of the LIGO detectors by up to an additional 22%, resulting in a significant expansion of the observable volume of universe and a commensurate increase in astrophysical event rates. This work lays the foundation for one of the key technology improvements essential to fully utilize the scientific potential of the existing 4-km LIGO facilities, to observe black hole merger events past a redshift of 5, and opens a realistic pathway towards a next-generation 40-km gravitational-wave observatory in the United States, Cosmic Explorer.

Presenters

  • Liu Tao

    University of California, Riverside

Authors

  • Liu Tao

    University of California, Riverside

  • Huy-Tuong Cao

    LIGO Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Mohak Bhattacharya

    University of California, Riverside

  • Peter Carney

    University of California, Riverside

  • Luis M Gutierrez

    University of California, Riverside

  • Luke Johnson

    University of California, Riverside

  • Shane Levin

    University of California, Riverside

  • Cynthia Liang

    University of California, Riverside

  • Xuesi Ma

    University of California, Riverside

  • Michael Padilla

    University of California, Riverside

  • Tyler Rosauer

    University of California, Riverside

  • Aiden Wilkin

    University of California, Riverside

  • Aidan F Brooks

    LIGO Laboratory, Caltech

  • Pooyan Goodarzi

    University of California Riverside, University of California Riverside, 92521 Riverside, California

  • Jonathan Richardson

    University of California, Riverside