Interferometric constraints on quantum geometrical shear noise correlations
Abstract
Final measurements and analysis are reported from the first-generation Holometer, the first instrument capable of measuring correlated variations in space-time position at strain noise power spectral densities smaller than a Planck time. The apparatus consists of two co-located, but independent and isolated, 40 m power-recycled Michelson interferometers, whose outputs are cross-correlated to 25 MHz. The data are sensitive to correlations of differential position across the apparatus over a broad band of frequencies up to and exceeding the inverse light crossing time, 7.6 MHz. By measuring with Planck precision the correlation of position variations at spacelike separations, the Holometer searches for faint, irreducible correlated position noise backgrounds predicted by some models of quantum space-time geometry. The first-generation optical layout is sensitive to quantum geometrical noise correlations with shear symmetry—those that can be interpreted as a fundamental noncommutativity of space-time position in orthogonal directions. General experimental constraints are placed on parameters of a set of models of spatial shear noise correlations, with a sensitivity that exceeds the Planck-scale holographic information bound on position states by a large factor. This result significantly extends the upper limits placed on models of directional noncommutativity by currently operating gravitational wave observatories.
Additional Information
© 2017 IOP Publishing Ltd. Received 20 March 2017, revised 13 June 2017; Accepted for publication 26 June 2017; Published 20 July 2017. This work was supported by the Department of Energy at Fermilab under Contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 and the Early Career Research Program (FNAL FWP 11-03), and by grants from the John Templeton Foundation, the National Science Foundation (Grants No. PHY-1205254, No. DGE-0909667, No. DGE-0638477, and No. DGE-1144082), NASA (Grant No. NNX09AR38G), the Fermi Research Alliance, the Ford Foundation, the Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics, University of Chicago/Fermilab Strategic Collaborative Initiatives, and the Universities Research Association Visiting Scholars Program. OK was supported by the Basic Science Research Program (Grant No. NRF-2016R1D1A1B03934333) of the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Education. The Holometer team gratefully acknowledges the extensive support and contributions of Bradford Boonstra, Benjamin Brubaker, Marcin Burdzy, Herman Cease, Tim Cunneen, Steve Dixon, Bill Dymond, Valera Frolov, Jose Gallegos, Emily Griffith, Hartmut Grote, Gaston Gutierrez, Evan Hall, Sten Hansen, Young-Kee Kim, Mark Kozlovsky, Dan Lambert, Scott McCormick, Erik Ramberg, George Ressinger, Doug Rudd, Geoffrey Schmit, Alex Sippel, Jason Steffen, Sali Sylejmani, David Tanner, Jim Volk, William Wester, and James Williams for the design and construction of the apparatus.Attached Files
Submitted - 1703.08503.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 81449
- DOI
- 10.1088/1361-6382/aa7bd3
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20170914-134346224
- Department of Energy (DOE)
- DE-AC02-07CH11359
- Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
- FNAL FWP 11-03
- John Templeton Foundation
- NSF
- PHY-1205254
- NSF
- DGE-0909667
- NSF
- DGE-0638477
- NSF
- DGE-1144082
- NASA
- NNX09AR38G
- Fermi Research Alliance
- Ford Foundation
- Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics
- University of Chicago
- Universities Research Association
- National Research Foundation of Korea
- NRF-2016R1D1A1B03934333
- Created
-
2017-09-14Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2022-10-26Created from EPrint's last_modified field