E. A. Houston
University of Glasgow
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Featured researches published by E. A. Houston.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2014
Christian Gräf; B. Barr; A. S. Bell; F. Campbell; A. Cumming; S. L. Danilishin; N. A. Gordon; G. Hammond; J. Hennig; E. A. Houston; S. H. Huttner; Russell Jones; S. Leavey; H. Lück; J. Macarthur; M. Marwick; S. Rigby; R. Schilling; B. Sorazu; A. P. Spencer; S. Steinlechner; K. A. Strain; S. Hild
The second generation of large scale interferometric gravitational wave (GW) detectors will be limited by quantum noise over a wide frequency range in their detection band. Further sensitivity improvements for future upgrades or new detectors beyond the second generation motivate the development of measurement schemes to mitigate the impact of quantum noise in these instruments. Two strands of development are being pursued to reach this goal, focusing both on modifications of the well-established Michelson detector configuration and development of different detector topologies. In this paper, we present the design of the worldʼs first Sagnac speed meter (SSM) interferometer, which is currently being constructed at the University of Glasgow. With this proof-of-principle experiment we aim to demonstrate the theoretically predicted lower quantum noise in a Sagnac interferometer compared to an equivalent Michelson interferometer, to qualify SSM for further research towards an implementation in a future generation large scale GW detector, such as the planned Einstein telescope observatory.
New Journal of Physics | 2015
S. L. Danilishin; Christian Gräf; S. Leavey; J. Hennig; E. A. Houston; D. Pascucci; S. Steinlechner; J. L. Wright; S. Hild
The speed meter concept has been identified as a technique that can potentially provide laser-interferometric measurements at a sensitivity level which surpasses the standard quantum limit (SQL) over a broad frequency range. As with other sub-SQL measurement techniques, losses play a central role in speed meter interferometers and they ultimately determine the quantum noise limited sensitivity that can be achieved. So far in the literature, the quantum noise limited sensitivity has only been derived for lossless or lossy cases using certain approximations (for instance that the arm cavity round trip loss is small compared to the arm cavity mirror transmission). In this article we present a generalized, analytical treatment of losses in speed meters that allows accurate calculation of the quantum noise limited sensitivity of Sagnac speed meters with arm cavities. In addition, our analysis allows us to take into account potential imperfections in the interferometer such as an asymmetric beam splitter or differences of the reflectivities of the two arm cavity input mirrors. Finally, we use the examples of the proof-of-concept Sagnac speed meter currently under construction in Glasgow and a potential implementation of a Sagnac speed meter in the Einstein Telescope to illustrate how our findings affect Sagnac speed meters with metre- and kilometre-long baselines.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2017
S. H. Huttner; S. L. Danilishin; B. Barr; A. S. Bell; Christian Gräf; J. Hennig; S. Hild; E. A. Houston; S. Leavey; D. Pascucci; B. Sorazu; A. P. Spencer; S. Steinlechner; J. L. Wright; Tianmeng Zhang; K. A. Strain
Speedmeters are known to be quantum non-demolition devices and, by potentially providing sensitivity beyond the standard quantum limit, become interesting for third generation gravitational wave detectors. Here we introduce a new configuration, the sloshing-Sagnac interferometer, and compare it to the more established ring-Sagnac interferometer. The sloshing-Sagnac interferometer is designed to provide improved quantum noise limited sensitivity and lower coating thermal noise than standard position meter interferometers employed in current gravitational wave detectors. We compare the quantum noise limited sensitivity of the ring-Sagnac and the sloshing-Sagnac interferometers, in the frequency range, from 5 Hz to 100 Hz, where they provide the greatest potential benefit. We evaluate the improvement in terms of the unweighted noise reduction below the standard quantum limit, and by finding the range up to which binary black hole inspirals may be observed. The sloshing-Sagnac was found to give approximately similar or better sensitivity than the ring-Sagnac in all cases. We also show that by eliminating the requirement for maximally-reflecting cavity end mirrors with correspondingly-thick multi-layer coatings, coating noise can be reduced by a factor of approximately 2.2 compared to conventional interferometers.
New Journal of Physics | 2018
T. Zhang; Eugene Knyazev; S. Steinlechner; Farid Ya. Khalili; B. Barr; A. S. Bell; P. Dupej; Joseph Briggs; C. Graef; Jack Callaghan; J. Hennig; E. A. Houston; S. H. Huttner; S. Leavey; D. Pascucci; B. Sorazu; A. P. Spencer; J. L. Wright; K. A. Strain; S. Hild; S. L. Danilishin
The Sagnac speed metre topology has been identified as a promising technique to reduce quantum back-action in gravitational-wave interferometers. However, imbalance of the main beamsplitter has been shown to increase the coupling of laser noise to the detection port, thus reducing the quantum noise superiority of the speed metre, compared to conventional approaches, in particular at low frequencies. In this paper, we show that by implementing a balanced homodyne readout scheme with a suitable choice of the point from which the local oscillator (LO) is derived, the excess laser noise contribution is partly compensated, and the resulting speed metre can be more sensitive than state-of-the-art position metres. This is achieved by picking-off the LO from either the reflection port of the interferometer or the anti-reflective coating surface of the main beamsplitter. We show that either approach relaxes the relative intensity noise (RIN) requirement of the input laser. For example, for a beam splitter imbalance of 0.1% in the Glasgow speed metre proof of concept experiment, the RIN requirement at frequency of 100 Hz decreases from 4× 10^(-10)/√Hz to 4× 10^(-7)/√Hz, moving the RIN requirement from a value that is hard to achieve in practice, to one which is routinely obtained.
arXiv: General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology | 2016
S. Leavey; S. L. Danilishin; A. Gläfke; B. Barr; A. S. Bell; Christian Gräf; J. Hennig; E. A. Houston; S. H. Huttner; H. Lück; D. Pascucci; K. Somiya; B. Sorazu; A. P. Spencer; S. Steinlechner; K. A. Strain; J. L. Wright; Tianmeng Zhang; S. Hild