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Published August 2015 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Quantum noise of a white-light cavity using a double-pumped gain medium

Abstract

Laser interferometric gravitational-wave detectors implement Fabry-Pérot cavities to increase their peak sensitivity. However, this is at the cost of reducing their detection bandwidth, which originates from the propagation phase delay of the light. The "white-light-cavity" idea, first proposed by Wicht et al. [Opt. Commun. 34, 431 (1997)], is to circumvent this limitation by introducing anomalous dispersion, using a double-pumped gain medium, to compensate for such a phase delay. In this article, starting from the Hamiltonian of the atom-light interaction, we apply an input-output formalism to evaluate the quantum noise of the system. We find that apart from the additional noise associated with the parametric amplification process noted by others, the stability condition for the entire system poses an additional constraint. By surveying the parameter regimes where the gain medium remains stable (not lasing) and stationary, we find that there is no net enhancement of the shot-noise-limited sensitivity. Therefore, other gain media or different parameter regimes should be explored for realizing the white-light cavity.

Additional Information

© 2015 American Physical Society. Received 6 January 2015; published 5 August 2015. We thank Atsushi Nishizawa, Bassam Helou, Belinda Pang, and other members of the LIGO-MQM discussion group for fruitful discussions. We thank Vsevolod Ivanov for reading our manuscript and André Fletcher for carefully proofreading the draft thereof. We also thank S. Shahriar for giving useful comments on the manuscript. Y.M. is supported by the Australian Department of Education, Science and Training. C.Z. is supported by the Australian Research Council. H.M. is supported by the Marie-Curie Fellowship. Y.C. is supported by NSF Grant No. PHY-1068881 and CAREER Grant No. PHY-0956189. Y.M. would like to thank Li Ju and David Blair for their keen support of his visit to Caltech where this work was done.

Attached Files

Published - PhysRevA.92.023807.pdf

Submitted - 1501.01349v1.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
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October 23, 2023