Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Karsten Danzmann is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Karsten Danzmann.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Observation of squeezed light with 10-dB quantum-noise reduction.

H. Vahlbruch; M. Mehmet; N. Lastzka; B. Hage; S. Chelkowski; A. Franzen; S. Gossler; Karsten Danzmann; Roman Schnabel

Squeezing of lights quantum noise requires temporal rearranging of photons. This again corresponds to creation of quantum correlations between individual photons. Squeezed light is a nonclassical manifestation of light with great potential in high-precision quantum measurements, for example, in the detection of gravitational waves [C. M. Caves, Phys. Rev. D 23, 1693 (1981)10.1103/PhysRevD.23.1693]. Equally promising applications have been proposed in quantum communication [H. P. Yuen and J. H. Shapiro, IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory 24, 657 (1978)10.1109/TIT.1978.1055958]. However, after 20 years of intensive research doubts arose whether strong squeezing can ever be realized as required for eminent applications. Here we show experimentally that strong squeezing of lights quantum noise is possible. We reached a benchmark squeezing factor of 10 in power (10 dB). Thorough analysis reveals that even higher squeezing factors will be feasible in our setup.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2012

Low-frequency gravitational-wave science with eLISA/NGO

Pau Amaro-Seoane; S. Aoudia; S. Babak; P. Binetruy; Emanuele Berti; A. Bohe; Chiara Caprini; Monica Colpi; Neil J. Cornish; Karsten Danzmann; Jean-Francois Dufaux; Jonathan R. Gair; Oliver Jennrich; Philippe Jetzer; Antoine Klein; Ryan N. Lang; Alberto Lobo; T. B. Littenberg; Sean T. McWilliams; Gijs Nelemans; Antoine Petiteau; Edward K. Porter; Bernard F. Schutz; Alberto Sesana; Robin T. Stebbins; T. J. Sumner; M. Vallisneri; S. Vitale; Marta Volonteri; H. Ward

We review the expected science performance of the New Gravitational-Wave Observatory (NGO, a.k.a. eLISA), a mission under study by the European Space Agency for launch in the early 2020s. eLISA will survey the low-frequency gravitational-wave sky (from 0.1 mHz to 1 Hz), detecting and characterizing a broad variety of systems and events throughout the Universe, including the coalescences of massive black holes brought together by galaxy mergers; the inspirals of stellar-mass black holes and compact stars into central galactic black holes; several millions of ultra-compact binaries, both detached and mass transferring, in the Galaxy; and possibly unforeseen sources such as the relic gravitational-wave radiation from the early Universe. eLISAs high signal-to-noise measurements will provide new insight into the structure and history of the Universe, and they will test general relativity in its strong-field dynamical regime.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2002

The GEO 600 gravitational wave detector

B. Willke; P. Aufmuth; Carsten Aulbert; S. Babak; R. Balasubramanian; B. Barr; Steven J. Berukoff; S. Bose; G. Cagnoli; M. M. Casey; D. Churches; D. Clubley; Carlo Nicola Colacino; D. R. M. Crooks; Curt Cutler; Karsten Danzmann; R. Davis; E. J. Elliffe; Carsten Fallnich; Andreas Freise; S. Gossler; A. Grant; H. Grote; Gerhard Heinzel; A. Heptonstall; M. Heurs; J. Hough; Keita Kawabe; Karsten Kötter; V. Leonhardt

The GEO 600 laser interferometer with 600 m armlength is part of a worldwide network of gravitational wave detectors. Due to the use of advanced technologies like multiple pendulum suspensions with a monolithic last stage and signal recycling, the anticipated sensitivity of GEO 600 is close to the initial sensitivity of detectors with several kilometres armlength. This paper describes the subsystems of GEO 600, the status of the detector by September 2001 and the plans towards the first science run.


Journal of Geodesy | 2012

Intersatellite laser ranging instrument for the GRACE follow-on mission

Benjamin Sheard; Gerhard Heinzel; Karsten Danzmann; Daniel A. Shaddock; William M. Klipstein; William M. Folkner

The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) has demonstrated that low–low satellite-to-satellite tracking enables monitoring the time variations of the Earth’s gravity field on a global scale, in particular those caused by mass-transport within the hydrosphere. Due to the importance of long-term continued monitoring of the variations of the Earth’s gravitational field and the limited lifetime of GRACE, a follow-on mission is currently planned to be launched in 2017. In order to minimise risk and the time to launch, the follow-on mission will be basically a rebuild of GRACE with microwave ranging as the primary instrument for measuring changes of the intersatellite distance. Laser interferometry has been proposed as a method to achieve improved ranging precision for future GRACE-like missions and is therefore foreseen to be included as demonstrator experiment in the follow-on mission now under development. This paper presents the top-level architecture of an interferometric laser ranging system designed to demonstrate the technology which can also operate in parallel with the microwave ranging system of the GRACE follow-on mission.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2003

LISA technology - concept, status, prospects

Karsten Danzmann; Albrecht Rüdiger

The existence of gravitational waves is the most prominent of Einsteins predictions that has not yet been directly verified. The space project LISA shares its goal and principle of operation with the ground-based interferometers currently under construction: the detection and measurement of gravitational waves by laser interferometry. Only in space, detection of signals below, say, 1 Hz is possible. LISA, a joint project of ESA and NASA, is a mission that will measure these low-frequency waves. LISA consists of three spacecraft in heliocentric orbits, forming a triangle with 5 million km sides. Launch for LISA is scheduled for 2011, following a technology demonstrator LTP in 2006.


Physics Letters A | 1993

Resonant sideband extraction: a new configuration for interferometric gravitational wave detectors

J. Mizuno; K. A. Strain; P. G. Nelson; J. M. Chen; R. Schilling; Albrecht Rüdiger; W. Winkler; Karsten Danzmann

Abstract We introduce a new Fabry-Perot based interferometric gravitational wave detector that, compared with previous designs, greatly decreases the amount of power that must be transmitted through optical substrates to obtain a given light power in its arms. This significantly reduces the effects of wavefront distortions caused by heating due to absorption in the optics, and allows an improved broadband sensitivity to be achieved.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

First Long-Term Application of Squeezed States of Light in a Gravitational-Wave Observatory

H. Grote; Karsten Danzmann; K. L. Dooley; Roman Schnabel; J. Slutsky; H. Vahlbruch

We report on the first long-term application of squeezed vacuum states of light to improve the shot-noise-limited sensitivity of a gravitational-wave observatory. In particular, squeezed vacuum was applied to the German-British detector GEO 600 during a period of three months from June to August 2011, when GEO 600 was performing an observational run together with the French-Italian Virgo detector. In a second period, the squeezing application continued for about 11 months from November 2011 to October 2012. During this time, squeezed vacuum was applied for 90.2% (205.2 days total) of the time that science-quality data were acquired with GEO 600. A sensitivity increase from squeezed vacuum application was observed broadband above 400 Hz. The time average of gain in sensitivity was 26% (2.0 dB), determined in the frequency band from 3.7 to 4.0 kHz. This corresponds to a factor of 2 increase in the observed volume of the Universe for sources in the kHz region (e.g., supernovae, magnetars). We introduce three new techniques to enable the long-term application of squeezed light, and show that the glitch rate of the detector did not increase from squeezing application. Squeezed vacuum states of light have arrived as a permanent application, capable of increasing the astrophysical reach of gravitational-wave detectors.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Coherent control of vacuum squeezing in the gravitational-wave detection band

H. Vahlbruch; S. Chelkowski; B. Hage; A. Franzen; Karsten Danzmann; Roman Schnabel

We propose and demonstrate a coherent control scheme for stable phase locking of squeezed vacuum fields. We focus on sideband fields at frequencies from 10 Hz to 10 kHz, which is a frequency regime of particular interest in gravitational-wave detection and for which conventional control schemes have failed so far. A vacuum field with broadband squeezing covering this entire band was produced using optical parametric oscillation and characterized with balanced homodyne detection. The system was stably controlled over long periods utilizing two coherent but frequency shifted control fields. In order to demonstrate the performance of our setup the squeezed field was used for a nonclassical sensitivity improvement of a Michelson interferometer at audio frequencies.


Physical Review A | 2010

Observation of squeezed states with strong photon-number oscillations

M. Mehmet; H. Vahlbruch; N. Lastzka; Karsten Danzmann; Roman Schnabel

Squeezed states of light constitute an important nonclassical resource in the field of high-precision measurements, for example, gravitational wave detection, as well as in the field of quantum information, for example, for teleportation, quantum cryptography, and distribution of entanglement in quantum computation networks. Strong squeezing in combination with high purity, high bandwidth, and high spatial mode quality is desirable in order to achieve significantly improved performances contrasting any classical protocols. Here we report on the observation of 11.5 dB of squeezing, together with relatively high state purity corresponding to a vacuum contribution of less than 5%, and a squeezing bandwidth of about 170 MHz. The analysis of our squeezed states reveals a significant production of higher-order pairs of quantum-correlated photons and the existence of strong photon-number oscillations.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 1996

LISA: laser interferometer space antenna for gravitational wave measurements

J. Hough; P. L. Bender; A. Brillet; Ignazio Ciufolini; Karsten Danzmann; Ronald W. Hellings; Alberto Lobo; M. Sandford; Bernard F. Schutz; Pierre Touboul

LISA (laser interferometer space antenna) is designed to observe gravitational waves from violent events in the Universe in a frequency range from to which is totally inaccessible to ground-based experiments. It uses highly stabilized laser light (Nd:YAG, ) in a Michelson-type interferometer arrangement. A cluster of six spacecraft with two at each vertex of an equilateral triangle is placed in an Earth-like orbit at a distance of 1 AU from the Sun, and behind the Earth. Three subsets of four adjacent spacecraft each form an interferometer comprising a central station, consisting of two relatively adjacent spacecraft (200 km apart), and two spacecraft placed at a distance of from the centre to form arms which make an angle of with each other. Each spacecraft is equipped with a laser. A descoped LISA with only four spacecraft has undergone an ESA assessment study in the M3 cycle and the full six-spacecraft LISA mission has now been selected as a cornerstone mission in the ESA Horizon 2000-plus programme.

Collaboration


Dive into the Karsten Danzmann's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

H. Ward

University of Glasgow

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge