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Prospective Sensitivities of Atom Interferometers to Gravitational Waves and Ultralight Dark Matter

We survey the prospective sensitivities of terrestrial and space-borne atom interferometers to gravitational waves generated by cosmological and astrophysical sources, and to ultralight dark matter. We discuss the backgrounds from gravitational gradient noise in terrestrial detectors, and also binar...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Badurina, Leonardo, Buchmueller, Oliver, Ellis, John, Lewicki, Marek, McCabe, Christopher, Vaskonen, Ville
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2021.0060
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2778091
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author Badurina, Leonardo
Buchmueller, Oliver
Ellis, John
Lewicki, Marek
McCabe, Christopher
Vaskonen, Ville
author_facet Badurina, Leonardo
Buchmueller, Oliver
Ellis, John
Lewicki, Marek
McCabe, Christopher
Vaskonen, Ville
author_sort Badurina, Leonardo
collection CERN
description We survey the prospective sensitivities of terrestrial and space-borne atom interferometers to gravitational waves generated by cosmological and astrophysical sources, and to ultralight dark matter. We discuss the backgrounds from gravitational gradient noise in terrestrial detectors, and also binary pulsar and asteroid backgrounds in space-borne detectors. We compare the sensitivities of LIGO and LISA with those of the 100 m and 1 km stages of the AION terrestrial AI project, as well as two options for the proposed AEDGE AI space mission with cold atom clouds either inside or outside the spacecraft, considering as possible sources the mergers of black holes and neutron stars, supernovae, phase transitions in the early Universe, cosmic strings and quantum fluctuations in the early Universe that could have generated primordial black holes. We also review the capabilities of AION and AEDGE for detecting coherent waves of ultralight scalar dark matter.AION-REPORT/2021-04KCL-PH-TH/2021-61, CERN-TH-2021-116This article is part of the theme issue ‘Quantum technologies in particle physics’.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2021
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spelling cern-27780912023-01-31T09:09:17Zdoi:10.1098/rsta.2021.0060http://cds.cern.ch/record/2778091engBadurina, LeonardoBuchmueller, OliverEllis, JohnLewicki, MarekMcCabe, ChristopherVaskonen, VilleProspective Sensitivities of Atom Interferometers to Gravitational Waves and Ultralight Dark Matterhep-phParticle Physics - Phenomenologyhep-exParticle Physics - Experimentastro-ph.HEAstrophysics and Astronomygr-qcGeneral Relativity and CosmologyWe survey the prospective sensitivities of terrestrial and space-borne atom interferometers to gravitational waves generated by cosmological and astrophysical sources, and to ultralight dark matter. We discuss the backgrounds from gravitational gradient noise in terrestrial detectors, and also binary pulsar and asteroid backgrounds in space-borne detectors. We compare the sensitivities of LIGO and LISA with those of the 100 m and 1 km stages of the AION terrestrial AI project, as well as two options for the proposed AEDGE AI space mission with cold atom clouds either inside or outside the spacecraft, considering as possible sources the mergers of black holes and neutron stars, supernovae, phase transitions in the early Universe, cosmic strings and quantum fluctuations in the early Universe that could have generated primordial black holes. We also review the capabilities of AION and AEDGE for detecting coherent waves of ultralight scalar dark matter.AION-REPORT/2021-04KCL-PH-TH/2021-61, CERN-TH-2021-116This article is part of the theme issue ‘Quantum technologies in particle physics’.We survey the prospective sensitivities of terrestrial and space-borne atom interferometers (AIs) to gravitational waves (GWs) generated by cosmological and astrophysical sources, and to ultralight dark matter. We discuss the backgrounds from gravitational gradient noise (GGN) in terrestrial detectors, and also binary pulsar and asteroid backgrounds in space-borne detectors. We compare the sensitivities of LIGO and LISA with those of the 100m and 1km stages of the AION terrestrial AI project, as well as two options for the proposed AEDGE AI space mission with cold atom clouds either inside or outside the spacecraft, considering as possible sources the mergers of black holes and neutron stars, supernovae, phase transitions in the early Universe, cosmic strings and quantum fluctuations in the early Universe that could have generated primordial black holes. We also review the capabilities of AION and AEDGE for detecting coherent waves of ultralight scalar dark matter.arXiv:2108.02468AION-REPORT/2021-04KCL-PH-TH/2021-61CERN-TH-2021-116oai:cds.cern.ch:27780912021-08-05
spellingShingle hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
hep-ex
Particle Physics - Experiment
astro-ph.HE
Astrophysics and Astronomy
gr-qc
General Relativity and Cosmology
Badurina, Leonardo
Buchmueller, Oliver
Ellis, John
Lewicki, Marek
McCabe, Christopher
Vaskonen, Ville
Prospective Sensitivities of Atom Interferometers to Gravitational Waves and Ultralight Dark Matter
title Prospective Sensitivities of Atom Interferometers to Gravitational Waves and Ultralight Dark Matter
title_full Prospective Sensitivities of Atom Interferometers to Gravitational Waves and Ultralight Dark Matter
title_fullStr Prospective Sensitivities of Atom Interferometers to Gravitational Waves and Ultralight Dark Matter
title_full_unstemmed Prospective Sensitivities of Atom Interferometers to Gravitational Waves and Ultralight Dark Matter
title_short Prospective Sensitivities of Atom Interferometers to Gravitational Waves and Ultralight Dark Matter
title_sort prospective sensitivities of atom interferometers to gravitational waves and ultralight dark matter
topic hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
hep-ex
Particle Physics - Experiment
astro-ph.HE
Astrophysics and Astronomy
gr-qc
General Relativity and Cosmology
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2021.0060
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2778091
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