Cargando…

Gravitomagnetic resonance and gravitational waves

<!--HTML-->Gravitational waves are usually described in terms of a transverse and traceless (TT) tensor, which allows to introduce the so-called TT coordinates. However, another possible approach is based on the use of a Fermi coordinates system, defined in the vicinity of the world-line of an...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Ruggiero, Matteo Luca
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2785105
_version_ 1780972118082584576
author Ruggiero, Matteo Luca
author_facet Ruggiero, Matteo Luca
author_sort Ruggiero, Matteo Luca
collection CERN
description <!--HTML-->Gravitational waves are usually described in terms of a transverse and traceless (TT) tensor, which allows to introduce the so-called TT coordinates. However, another possible approach is based on the use of a Fermi coordinates system, defined in the vicinity of the world-line of an observer arbitrarily moving in spacetime. In particular, Fermi coordinates have a direct operational meaning, since they are the coordinates an observer would use to perform space and time measurements; indeed, using these coordinates the metric tensor contains (up to the required approximation level) only quantities that are invariant under coordinate transformations internal to the reference frame. Using this approach it is simple to emphasise that what an observer measures depends both on the background field where he is moving and, also, on his kind of motion. This is quite similar to what happens when we study classical mechanics in non inertial frames: inertial forces appear, depending on the peculiar motion of the frame with respect to an inertial one. We show that using Fermi coordinates the effects of a plane gravitational wave can be described by gravitoelectromagnetic fields: in other words, the wave field is equivalent to the action of a gravitoelectric and a gravitomagnetic field, that are transverse to the propagation direction and orthogonal to each other. In particular, the gravito-magnetic field acts on spinning particles and we show that, due to the action of the gravitational wave field a gravitomagnetic resonance may appear. We give both a classical and a quantum description of this phenomenon and suggest that it can be used as the basis for a new type of gravitational wave detectors.
id cern-2785105
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2021
record_format invenio
spelling cern-27851052022-11-02T22:02:54Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2785105engRuggiero, Matteo LucaGravitomagnetic resonance and gravitational wavesUltra-High-Frequency GWs: A Theory and Technology RoadmapConferences & Workshops<!--HTML-->Gravitational waves are usually described in terms of a transverse and traceless (TT) tensor, which allows to introduce the so-called TT coordinates. However, another possible approach is based on the use of a Fermi coordinates system, defined in the vicinity of the world-line of an observer arbitrarily moving in spacetime. In particular, Fermi coordinates have a direct operational meaning, since they are the coordinates an observer would use to perform space and time measurements; indeed, using these coordinates the metric tensor contains (up to the required approximation level) only quantities that are invariant under coordinate transformations internal to the reference frame. Using this approach it is simple to emphasise that what an observer measures depends both on the background field where he is moving and, also, on his kind of motion. This is quite similar to what happens when we study classical mechanics in non inertial frames: inertial forces appear, depending on the peculiar motion of the frame with respect to an inertial one. We show that using Fermi coordinates the effects of a plane gravitational wave can be described by gravitoelectromagnetic fields: in other words, the wave field is equivalent to the action of a gravitoelectric and a gravitomagnetic field, that are transverse to the propagation direction and orthogonal to each other. In particular, the gravito-magnetic field acts on spinning particles and we show that, due to the action of the gravitational wave field a gravitomagnetic resonance may appear. We give both a classical and a quantum description of this phenomenon and suggest that it can be used as the basis for a new type of gravitational wave detectors.oai:cds.cern.ch:27851052021
spellingShingle Conferences & Workshops
Ruggiero, Matteo Luca
Gravitomagnetic resonance and gravitational waves
title Gravitomagnetic resonance and gravitational waves
title_full Gravitomagnetic resonance and gravitational waves
title_fullStr Gravitomagnetic resonance and gravitational waves
title_full_unstemmed Gravitomagnetic resonance and gravitational waves
title_short Gravitomagnetic resonance and gravitational waves
title_sort gravitomagnetic resonance and gravitational waves
topic Conferences & Workshops
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2785105
work_keys_str_mv AT ruggieromatteoluca gravitomagneticresonanceandgravitationalwaves
AT ruggieromatteoluca ultrahighfrequencygwsatheoryandtechnologyroadmap