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Dive into the research topics where S. E. Dwyer is active.

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Featured researches published by S. E. Dwyer.


Physical Review D | 2015

Gravitational wave detector with cosmological reach

S. E. Dwyer; D. Sigg; S. Ballmer; L. Barsotti; N. Mavalvala; M. Evans

Twenty years ago, construction began on the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO). Advanced LIGO, with a factor of 10 better design sensitivity than Initial LIGO, will begin taking data this year, and should soon make detections a monthly occurrence. While Advanced LIGO promises to make first detections of gravitational waves from the nearby universe, an additional factor of 10 increase in sensitivity would put exciting science targets within reach by providing observations of binary black hole inspirals throughout most of the history of star formation, and high signal to noise observations of nearby events. Design studies for future detectors to date rely on significant technological advances that are futuristic and risky. In this paper we propose a different direction. We resurrect the idea of using longer arm lengths coupled with largely proven technologies. Since the major noise sources that limit gravitational wave detectors do not scale trivially with the length of the detector, we study their impact and find that 40 km arm lengths are nearly optimal, and can incorporate currently available technologies to detect gravitational wave sources at cosmological distances ðz ≳ 7Þ.


Optics Express | 2013

Squeezed quadrature fluctuations in a gravitational wave detector using squeezed light

S. E. Dwyer; L. Barsotti; S. Chua; M. Evans; M. Factourovich; D. Gustafson; T. Isogai; K. Kawabe; A. Khalaidovski; Ping Koy Lam; M. Landry; N. Mavalvala; D. E. McClelland; G. D. Meadors; C. M. Mow-Lowry; Roman Schnabel; R. Schofield; N. D. Smith-Lefebvre; M. Stefszky; C. Vorvick; D. Sigg

Squeezed states of light are an important tool for optical measurements below the shot noise limit and for optical realizations of quantum information systems. Recently, squeezed vacuum states were deployed to enhance the shot noise limited performance of gravitational wave detectors. In most practical implementations of squeezing enhancement, relative fluctuations between the squeezed quadrature angle and the measured quadrature (sometimes called squeezing angle jitter or phase noise) are one limit to the noise reduction that can be achieved. We present calculations of several effects that lead to quadrature fluctuations, and use these estimates to account for the observed quadrature fluctuations in a LIGO gravitational wave detector. We discuss the implications of this work for quantum enhanced advanced detectors and even more sensitive third generation detectors.


Optics Letters | 2011

Backscatter tolerant squeezed light source for advanced gravitational-wave detectors

S. Chua; M. Stefszky; C. M. Mow-Lowry; Ben C. Buchler; S. E. Dwyer; Daniel A. Shaddock; Ping Koy Lam; D. E. McClelland

We report on the performance of a dual-wavelength resonant, traveling-wave optical parametric oscillator to generate squeezed light for application in advanced gravitational-wave interferometers. Shot noise suppression of 8.6±0.8 dB was measured across the detection band of interest to Advanced LIGO, and controlled squeezing measured over 5900 s. Our results also demonstrate that the traveling-wave design has excellent intracavity backscattered light suppression of 47 dB and incident backscattered light suppression of 41 dB, which is a crucial design issue for application in advanced interferometers.


Optics Express | 2014

Squeezed light for advanced gravitational wave detectors and beyond

E. Oelker; L. Barsotti; S. E. Dwyer; D. Sigg; N. Mavalvala

Recent experiments have demonstrated that squeezed vacuum states can be injected into gravitational wave detectors to improve their sensitivity at detection frequencies where they are quantum noise limited. Squeezed states could be employed in the next generation of more sensitive advanced detectors currently under construction, such as Advanced LIGO, to further push the limits of the observable gravitational wave Universe. To maximize the benefit from squeezing, environmentally induced disturbances such as back scattering and angular jitter need to be mitigated. We discuss the limitations of current squeezed vacuum sources in relation to the requirements imposed by future gravitational wave detectors, and show a design for squeezed light injection which overcomes these limitations.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2014

Impact of backscattered light in a squeezing-enhanced interferometric gravitational-wave detector

S. Chua; S. E. Dwyer; L. Barsotti; D. Sigg; R. Schofield; V. V. Frolov; K. Kawabe; M. Evans; G. D. Meadors; M. Factourovich; R. Gustafson; N. D. Smith-Lefebvre; C. Vorvick; M. Landry; A. Khalaidovski; M. Stefszky; C. M. Mow-Lowry; Benjamin Buchler; Daniel A. Shaddock; Ping Koy Lam; Roman Schnabel; N. Mavalvala; D. E. McClelland

Squeezed states of light have been recently used to improve the sensitivity of laser-interferometric gravitational-wave detectors beyond the quantum limit. To completely establish quantum engineering as a realistic option for the next generation of detectors, it is crucial to study and quantify the noise coupling mechanisms which injection of squeezed states could potentially introduce. We present a direct measurement of the impact of backscattered light from a squeezed-light source deployed on one of the 4 km long detectors of the laser interferometric gravitational wave observatory (LIGO). We also show how our measurements inform the design of squeezed-light sources compatible with the


Physical Review D | 2014

Radiative Thermal Noise for Transmissive Optics in Gravitational-Wave Detectors

S. E. Dwyer; S. Ballmer

Radiative losses have traditionally been neglected in the calculation of thermal noise of transmissive optical elements because for the most commonly used geometries they are small compared to losses due to thermal conduction. We explore the use of such transmissive optical elements in extremely noise-sensitive environments such as the arm cavities of future gravitational-wave interferometers. This drives us to a geometry regime where radiative losses are no longer negligible. In this paper we derive the thermo-refractive noise associated with such radiative losses and compare it to other known sources of thermal noise.


Physical Review D | 2015

Effect of squeezing on parameter estimation of gravitational waves emitted by compact binary systems

Ryan S. Lynch; Salvatore Vitale; L. Barsotti; S. E. Dwyer; M. Evans

The LIGO gravitational wave (GW) detectors will begin collecting data in 2015, with Virgo following shortly after. The use of squeezing has been proposed as a way to reduce the quantum noise without increasing the laser power, and has been successfully tested at one of the LIGO sites and at GEO in Germany. When used in Advanced LIGO without a filter cavity, the squeezer improves the performances of detectors above about 100 Hz, at the cost of a higher noise floor in the low frequency regime. Frequency-dependent squeezing, on the other hand, will lower the noise floor throughout the entire band. Squeezing technology will have a twofold impact: it will change the number of expected detections and it will impact the quality of parameter estimation for the detected signals. In this work we consider three different GW detector networks, each utilizing a different type of squeezer, all corresponding to plausible implementations. Using LALInference, a powerful Monte Carlo parameter estimation algorithm, we study how each of these networks estimates the parameters of GW signals emitted by compact binary systems, and compare the results with a baseline advanced LIGO-Virgo network. We find that, even in its simplest implementation, squeezing has a large positive impact: the sky error area of detected signals will shrink by about 30% on average, increasing the chances of finding an electromagnetic counterpart to the GW detection. Similarly, we find that the measurability of tidal deformability parameters for neutron stars in binaries increases by about 30%, which could aid in determining the equation of state of neutron stars. The degradation in the measurement of the chirp mass, as a result of the higher low-frequency noise, is shown to be negligible when compared to systematic errors.


Archive | 2014

Advantages of scaling up gravitational wave detectors

S. E. Dwyer; D. Sigg; S. Ballmer; L. Barsotti; N. Mavalvala; M. Evans


Archive | 2014

Radiative Thermo-Refractive Noise for Transmissive Optics

S. E. Dwyer; S. Ballmer


APS | 2012

Upper limits on a stochastic gravitational-wave background using LIGO and Virgo interferometers at 600–1000 Hz

L. Barsotti; T. P. Bodiya; T.R. Corbitt; F. Donovan; S. E. Dwyer; M. Evans; S. Foley; P. Fritschel; G. M. Harry; E. Katsavounidis; J. S. Kissel; M. Macinnis; Ilya Mandel; K. Mason; F. Matichard; N. Mavalvala; R. Mittleman; E. Oelker; B. Shapiro; D. H. Shoemaker; J. Soto; Andrew J. Stein; Leo C. Stein; R. Vaulin; S.J. Waldman; Rainer Weiss; C.C. Wipf; M. E. Zucker

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L. Barsotti

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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M. Evans

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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N. Mavalvala

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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S. Chua

PSL Research University

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C. M. Mow-Lowry

Australian National University

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D. E. McClelland

Australian National University

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M. Stefszky

Australian National University

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Ping Koy Lam

Australian National University

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C. Vorvick

National Science Foundation

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