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Mike Cruise University of Birmingham Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

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Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves. Mike Cruise University of Birmingham. Signals from Neutron Stars. Signals from SMBH’s. LIGO , Virgo, LISA or pulsar timing are most likely to make the first detections. Why go to higher frequencies?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Mike Cruise

University of Birmingham

Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Page 2: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Signals from Neutron Stars

Page 3: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Signals from SMBH’s

LIGO , Virgo, LISA or pulsar timing are most likely to make the first detections

Page 4: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Why go to higher frequencies?

• Other branches of astronomy developed through mullti-frequency observations

• For frequencies >1 MHz– Cosmological signals from the Planck era.– KK mode oscillations in higher dimensions– EMW-plasma instabilities generate GW’s– Radiation from non-minimal coupling of the

EM and G fields

Page 5: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Very High Frequency detectors?

• The best upper limit at 100 MHz by Akutsu and Kawamura of ~10-17 was with an interferometer

• But Interferometer sensitivity worsens as• Minimum detectable EM signal in a 1 Hz

bandwidth ~ 10-20 W• Maximum EMW power ~ 10’s of MW

• ratio of min detectable signal ~ 10-27

max available energy

21

E or B

Page 6: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Pathways for coupling EM and Gravity

22

2 2 4

116

Gh T

c t c

F g g F

May contain EM Fields

Contain G potentials

Page 7: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

How does a GW interact with a static EM Field?

• De Logi and Mickelson (1977)

Graviton

Virtual Photon( Static Magnetic Field )

Photon

3

228

c

LGBSpin states of g, B and

For one incoming graviton per second

Page 8: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

What are the fluxes?

• Flux of photons is times the flux of gravitons

• EM Signal Power is

1

1622

2

hG

cFlux

22222

08

1cSinhKLBP

Page 9: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves
Page 10: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Early Universe

Page 11: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Brane Oscillations

• Seahra and Clarkson have calculated the GW emission in 5-D gravity when stellar mass black holes fall into a black hole

• Different from

the LF radiation from such

a system, there is also an

excitation of the

brane separation

itself

Page 12: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves
Page 13: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

This is a Source which exists!

But maybe in a universe which doesn’t

Page 14: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Plasma-EMW instabilities

• Linearised field equations in terms of a small metric perturbation, h

• Interaction of EM Fields and EM Waves

42

2

22

2 161

c

Gh

tcx

FFFF

4

1

4

1

Increased charge density

contributes to stress energy

tensor

Tidal forces affect

chargedensity

Page 15: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Nucleosynthesis limit

Cosmological Models

Current DetectorsCurrent Detectors

Page 16: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves
Page 17: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves
Page 18: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Higher Energy Density

Page 19: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves
Page 20: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves
Page 21: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Cosmological Models

Current DetectorsGalactic centre

Shadow Brane

Galactic CentreVisible Brane

Two element interferometer

Nucleosynthesis limit

Page 22: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Statement

• The work presented here derives from many papers on EM-GW interactions published in properly peer reviewed journals since the 1970’s

• This work has no connection with (and does not support or endorse) ideas published by the HFGW group

Page 23: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Conclusion

• Very high frequency gravitational waves may allow us to observe the very early universe, violent astrophysical events or exciting areas of new physics

• Current detectors are now beginning observations of the Galactic Centre at GHz and Optical Frequencies

• A two element interferometer is being designed jointly by Birmingham and Jodrell Bank

Page 24: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves
Page 25: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Higher sensitivity

Page 26: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Gravitational Waves in Space

• measure the separation between three spacecraft using laser beams.

• Use a long baseline so that the movement is larger.

• Measure separation to 10 pm 10-11 m over 5 million km.

Page 27: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Other mechanisms

Bubble collisions Decay of Cosmic Strings

Page 28: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

“ Conversion” process• Inverse Gertsenshtein Effect

• EMW signal ~ h2L2K2B2

• Same frequency and direction as GW

• Must ensure phase coherence of EMW and GW

BEMW

L

h

Lens+CCD

Page 29: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

The Universe- and how we study it

• Everything we know about the Universe comes from studying electromagnetic waves ( Infra-red, X-rays, radio waves, etc) of different frequencies

• Different frequencies tell us about different temperature regimes

• But many of the problems in astrophysics are to do with mass, not temperature.

What can Gravity tell us?

Page 30: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Measuring the waves:Interferometer

Laser

Photodiode

Mass

Mass

Page 31: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

The Largest Instrument Ever!

• Three spacecraft with laser beams between them in a solar orbit.

• The pattern rotates each year to scan the sky.

Page 32: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

How does a GW affect an EMW?

• Amplitude• Direction• Frequency• Polarisation state

quiescentsig hEE ~

GW

EMFieldhEnergySig2~

Page 33: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

lldp e

l

mm

MRkpcMxh 2/)5(

5.021 1.011

109

Page 34: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

Other Inflation Theories

• Garcia -Bellido

Page 35: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves

What kind of Instrument?

• Interferometer sensitivity worsens as • Current best Upper Limit is by Akutsu,

Kawamura et al– 10-17 at 100 MHz

• So h ~ 10-23 at 1000Hz will be 10-20 at 1 GHz

221

min 14

8

1

P

ch

FLh

21

Page 36: Searches for very high frequency gravitational waves