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EC(H)Os in the dark: Gravitational Wave backgrounds from colliding ECOs at atom interferometers

<!--HTML-->Long baseline atom interferometers (LBAI) offer an exciting opportunity to explore mid-frequency gravitational waves. In this talk I will advocate for targeting the total 'gravitational wave background', surveying the landscape of possible contributions within this frequen...

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Autor principal: Banks, Hannah
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2860864
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author Banks, Hannah
author_facet Banks, Hannah
author_sort Banks, Hannah
collection CERN
description <!--HTML-->Long baseline atom interferometers (LBAI) offer an exciting opportunity to explore mid-frequency gravitational waves. In this talk I will advocate for targeting the total 'gravitational wave background', surveying the landscape of possible contributions within this frequency band. I will demonstrate that the cumulative signal from the inspirals of the LIGO-Virgo stellar-mass binaries is well within reach of typical terrestrial LBAI and may have much to reveal about the Universe. Finally, I will show that populations of dark sector exotic compact objects harbouring just a tiny fraction of the dark energy density, could generate signatures unique to mid- and low-frequency gravitational wave detectors, providing a novel means to probe complexity in the dark sector.
id cern-2860864
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2023
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spelling cern-28608642023-06-05T19:47:15Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2860864engBanks, HannahEC(H)Os in the dark: Gravitational Wave backgrounds from colliding ECOs at atom interferometersThird EuCAPT Annual SymposiumEucapt Conferences<!--HTML-->Long baseline atom interferometers (LBAI) offer an exciting opportunity to explore mid-frequency gravitational waves. In this talk I will advocate for targeting the total 'gravitational wave background', surveying the landscape of possible contributions within this frequency band. I will demonstrate that the cumulative signal from the inspirals of the LIGO-Virgo stellar-mass binaries is well within reach of typical terrestrial LBAI and may have much to reveal about the Universe. Finally, I will show that populations of dark sector exotic compact objects harbouring just a tiny fraction of the dark energy density, could generate signatures unique to mid- and low-frequency gravitational wave detectors, providing a novel means to probe complexity in the dark sector.oai:cds.cern.ch:28608642023
spellingShingle Eucapt Conferences
Banks, Hannah
EC(H)Os in the dark: Gravitational Wave backgrounds from colliding ECOs at atom interferometers
title EC(H)Os in the dark: Gravitational Wave backgrounds from colliding ECOs at atom interferometers
title_full EC(H)Os in the dark: Gravitational Wave backgrounds from colliding ECOs at atom interferometers
title_fullStr EC(H)Os in the dark: Gravitational Wave backgrounds from colliding ECOs at atom interferometers
title_full_unstemmed EC(H)Os in the dark: Gravitational Wave backgrounds from colliding ECOs at atom interferometers
title_short EC(H)Os in the dark: Gravitational Wave backgrounds from colliding ECOs at atom interferometers
title_sort ec(h)os in the dark: gravitational wave backgrounds from colliding ecos at atom interferometers
topic Eucapt Conferences
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2860864
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