Measurement of optical losses in a high-finesse 300 m filter cavity for broadband quantum noise reduction in gravitational-wave detectors

E. Capocasa(Laboratoire AstroParticule et Cosmologie), Y. Guo(Beijing Normal University), M. Eisenmann(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Yuhang Zhao(The Graduate University for Advanced Studies, SOKENDAI), Akihiro Tomura(University of Electro-Communications), K. Arai(California Institute of Technology), Y. Aso(National Astronomical Observatory of Japan), M. Marchio(National Astronomical Observatory of Japan), Laurent Pinard(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), P. Prat(Laboratoire AstroParticule et Cosmologie), K. Somiya(Tokyo Institute of Technology), R. Schnabel(Universität Hamburg), M. Tacca(National Institute for Subatomic Physics), Ryutaro Takahashi(National Astronomical Observatory of Japan), Daisuke Tatsumi(National Astronomical Observatory of Japan), M. Leonardi(National Astronomical Observatory of Japan), M. Barsuglia(Laboratoire AstroParticule et Cosmologie), R. Flaminio(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique)
Physical review. D/Physical review. D.
July 31, 2018
Cited by 19Open Access
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Abstract

Earth-based gravitational-wave detectors will be limited by quantum noise in a large part of their spectrum. The most promising technique to achieve a broadband reduction of such noise is the injection of a frequency-dependent squeezed vacuum state from the output port of the detector, with the squeeze angle rotated by the reflection off a Fabry-Perot filter cavity. One of the most important parameters limiting the squeezing performance is represented by the optical losses of the filter cavity. We report here the operation of a 300 m filter cavity prototype installed at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan. The cavity is designed to obtain a rotation of the squeeze angle below 100 Hz. After achieving the resonance of the cavity with a multiwavelength technique, the round trip losses have been measured to be between 50 and 90 ppm. This result demonstrates that with realistic assumptions on the input squeeze factor and the other optical losses, a quantum noise reduction of at least 4 dB in the frequency region dominated by radiation pressure can be achieved.


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