Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2009
This book is about gravitational radiation detectors. It is about experimental physics: the physics of extremely sensitive instruments designed to detect the infinitesimal time varying strains in spacetime which are gravitational waves.
For half a century most physicists considered the detection of gravitational waves to be an impossibility, but 30 years ago Joseph Weber first outlined possible means of detection, and followed this by a lonely pioneering decade of instrument development. About 20 years ago a range of new technologies appeared on the horizon, and we have now seen two decades of advance in a variety of areas, often driven by the needs of gravitational radiation detection. Looked at as a whole these represent a spectacular advance in technological capability, and now it is possible to look forward to a future when gravitational astronomy will plug a major gap in our knowledge of the universe.
The first area of intense effort was in the development of improved resonant bar antennas. This led to the development and understanding of systems and materials with ultralow acoustic loss, and ultralow electromagnetic loss. The development of low loss microwave cavities led to new technologies for vibration transducers and frequency standards. The need for sensitive amplifiers was met by the development of greatly improved superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs) and cryogenic gallium arsenide field effect transistor amplifiers. The understanding of quantum mechanical limitations to measurement led to the development of techniques called variously squeezing, quantum nondemolition and back action evasion.
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