Broadband reduction of quantum radiation pressure noise via squeezed light injection

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Yap, Min Jet
Cripe, Jonathan
Mansell, Georgia
McRae, Terry
Ward, Robert
Slagmolen, Bram
Heu, Paula
Follman, David
Cole, Garrett
Corbitt , Thomas

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Nature Publishing Group

Abstract

The Heisenberg uncertainty principle states that the position of an object cannot be known with infinite precision, as the momentum of the object would then be totally uncertain. This momentum uncertainty then leads to position uncertainty in future measurements. When continuously measuring the position of an object, this quantum effect, known as back-action, limits the achievable precision1,2 . In audio-band, interferometer-type gravitational-wave detectors, this backaction effect manifests as quantum radiation pressure noise (QRPN) and will ultimately (but does not yet) limit sensitivity3 . Here, we present the use of a quantum engineered state of light to directly manipulate this quantum back-action in a system where it dominates the sensitivity in the 10-50 kHz range. We observe a reduction of 1.2 dB in the quantum backaction noise. This experiment is a crucial step in realizing QRPN reduction for future interferometric gravitational-wave detectors and improving their sensitivity

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Nature Photonics

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Restricted until

2099-12-31

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