(Daniela, Jennifer, Haixing, Omar, Peter, Vaishali, Sebastian)
Looking at Cosmic Explorer preliminary designs, we see that ET-D performs very well at both high and low frequencies, but there is an intermediate range at around 20-80Hz where the sensitivity curve has a distinct 'bump':
Also, the classical noise in ET-LF is quite a bit below the quantum noise, which seems like a waste of resources:
Now, unfortunately we cannot (?) significantly increase the power without losing the 20K operation. Losing 20K also almost certainly means we lose low-frequency (< 10Hz) sensitivity completely. A 120K, non-xylophone configuration was the topic of the Xylophone Congiguration working group, so we don't want to look at it here. Instead, we look at what tricks we can play to increase (in ET or as a subsequent ET+ upgrade) the low-frequency sensitivity.
There is an ultimate quantum limit that we can reach with any passive topology. We can approximate this with a dynamic tuning of the SR cavity (ET timescales?), or with “fancy quantum filters” inside the SR cavity (ET+ timescales?). At low frequencies, inspiral times are ~100-10000 seconds, as shown by the 7Hz/20Hz group. Therefore, dynamic signal-recycling detuning might not be completely out of question (popular opinion will vary).
Drawbacks:
Scripts are located in a Git repository: ET-LF-design-review.
ET_LF_SqueezePath.ipynb
If we can increase the optical power for ET-LF, instead of detuned operation mentioned above, we can use the tuned configuration and apply an unstable filter to broaden the bandwidth of ET-LF, and cover the sensitivity by ET-HF.
Below are two examples:
Both assume 10dB frequency-dependent squeezing and adding one unstable filter. The transmission of SRM are 0.1 and 0.05 respectively.
We can also remain the mass and to cancel the low-frequency radiation pressure by either using speed meter or the frequency-dependent readout together with frequency-independent squeezing. Below is the example of frequency dependent readout with 1% loss for the mode-matching to the filter cavity. [Note: the result is preliminary. It needs further optimisation and validation. Our UoB students Joe Bentley and Philip Jones will work on this.]
Older stuff below.
Mass | Wavelength | Material | Intra cavity power | arm length | ITM (transmission) | ETM (transmission) | SRM (transmission) | loss |
200kg | 1550nm | Silicon | ~18kW | 10km | 7000ppm | 6ppm | 0.2 | 37.5ppm |