Theoretical investigations of experimental gravitation


Autoria(s): Caves, Carlton Morris
Data(s)

1979

Resumo

<p>This thesis has two basic themes: the investigation of new experiments which can be used to test relativistic gravity, and the investigation of new technologies and new experimental techniques which can be applied to make gravitational wave astronomy a reality.</p> <p>Advancing technology will soon make possible a new class of gravitation experiments: pure laboratory experiments with laboratory sources of non-Newtonian gravity and laboratory detectors. The key advance in techno1ogy is the development of resonant sensing systems with very low levels of dissipation. Chapter 1 considers three such systems (torque balances, dielectric monocrystals, and superconducting microwave resonators), and it proposes eight laboratory experiments which use these systems as detectors. For each experiment it describes the dominant sources of noise and the technology required.</p> <p>The coupled electro-mechanical system consisting of a microwave cavity and its walls can serve as a gravitational radiation detector. A gravitational wave interacts with the walls, and the resulting motion induces transitions from a highly excited cavity mode to a nearly unexcited mode. Chapter 2 describes briefly a formalism for analyzing such a detector, and it proposes a particular design.</p> <p>The monitoring of a quantum mechanical harmonic oscillator on which a classical force acts is important in a variety of high-precision experiments, such as the attempt to detect gravitational radiation. Chapter 3 reviews the standard techniques for monitoring the oscillator; and it introduces a new technique which, in principle, can determine the details of the force with arbitrary accuracy, despite the quantum properties of the oscillator.</p> <p>The standard method for monitoring the oscillator is the "amplitude- and-phase" method (position or momentum transducer with output fed through a linear amplifier). The accuracy obtainable by this method is limited by the uncertainty principle. To do better requires a measurement of the type which Braginsky has called "quantum nondemolition." A well-known quantum nondemolition technique is "quantum counting," which can detect an arbitrarily weak force, but which cannot provide good accuracy in determining its precise time-dependence. Chapter 3 considers extensively a new type of quantum nondemolition measurement - a "back-action-evading" measurement of the real part X<sub>1</sub> (or the imaginary part X<sub>2</sub>) of the oscillator's complex amplitude. In principle X<sub>1</sub> can be measured arbitrarily quickly and arbitrarily accurately, and a sequence of such measurements can lead to an arbitrarily accurate monitoring of the classical force.</p> <p>Chapter 3 describes explicit gedanken experiments which demonstrate that X<sub>1</sub> can be measured arbitrarily quickly and arbitrarily accurately, it considers approximate back-action-evading measurements, and it develops a theory of quantum nondemolition measurement for arbitrary quantum mechanical systems.</p> <p>In Rosen's "bimetric" theory of gravity the (local) speed of gravitational radiation v<sub>g</sub> is determined by the combined effects of cosmological boundary values and nearby concentrations of matter. It is possible for v<sub>g</sub> to be less than the speed of light. Chapter 4 shows that emission of gravitational radiation prevents particles of nonzero rest mass from exceeding the speed of gravitational radiation. Observations of relativistic particles place limits on v<sub>g</sub> and the cosmological boundary values today, and observations of synchrotron radiation from compact radio sources place limits on the cosmological boundary values in the past.</p>

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://thesis.library.caltech.edu/9621/1/Caves_cm_1979.pdf

Caves, Carlton Morris (1979) Theoretical investigations of experimental gravitation. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:03152016-161054898 <http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:03152016-161054898>

Relação

http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:03152016-161054898

http://thesis.library.caltech.edu/9621/

Tipo

Thesis

NonPeerReviewed