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Einstein Telescope

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Website
  
www.et-gw.eu

Einstein Telescope wwwasperaeuorgimagesstoriesMag7et201102jpg

Telescope style
  
gravitational-wave detector

Einstein Telescope (ET) or Einstein Observatory, is a proposed third-generation ground-based gravitational wave detector, currently under study by some institutions in the European Union. It will be able to test Einstein's general theory of relativity in strong field conditions and realize precision gravitational wave astronomy.

Contents

Einstein Telescope Einstein Telescope Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics

The ET is a design study project supported by the European Commission under the Framework Programme 7 (FP7). It concerns the study and the conceptual design for a new research infrastructure in the emergent field of gravitational-wave astronomy.

Einstein Telescope Einstein Telescope Slideshow

Motivation

Einstein Telescope Astrophysics amp Space Research Group Gravitation group

The evolution of the current gravitational wave detectors Virgo and LIGO, as first generation detectors, is well defined. After the current upgrade to their so-called enhanced level, the detectors are evolving toward their second generation: the advanced Virgo and LIGO detectors. LIGO already detected gravitational waves in 2015 and further sensitivity upgrades promise many more detections to follow. But the sensitivity needed to test Einstein's theory of gravity in strong field conditions or to realize a precision gravitational wave astronomy, mainly of massive stellar bodies or of highly asymmetric (in mass) binary stellar systems goes beyond the expected performances of the advanced detectors and of their subsequent upgrades. For example, the fundamental limitations at low frequency of the sensitivity of the second generation detectors are given by the seismic noise, the related gravitational gradient noise (so-called Newtonian noise) and the thermal noise of the suspension last stage and of the test masses.

Einstein Telescope aspera Home stretch for the Design Study of ET

To circumvent these limitations new infrastructures are necessary: an underground site for the detector, to limit the effect of the seismic noise, and cryogenic facilities to cool down the mirrors to directly reduce the thermal vibration of the test masses.

Technical groups

Einstein Telescope 3rd ET GENERAL WORKSHOP 2324 November 2010

The ET-FP7 project, through its four technical working groups is addressing the basic questions in the realization of this proposed observatory: site location and characteristics (WP1), suspension design and technologies (WP2), detector topology and geometry (WP3), detection capabilities requirements and astrophysics potentialities (WP4).

Participants

Einstein Telescope A Mock Data Challenge for the Einstein GravitationalWave Telescope

ET is a design study project in the European Framework Programme (FP7). It has been proposed by 8 European leading gravitational wave experimental research institutes. The project coordination is realized by the European Gravitational Observatory.

  • European Gravitational Observatory
  • Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
  • Max-Planck-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der Wissenschaften e. V., acting through Max-Planck-Institut für Gravitationsphysik
  • Centre national de la recherche scientifique
  • University of Birmingham
  • University of Glasgow
  • NIKHEF
  • Cardiff University
  • Current design

    Although still in the early design study phase, the basic parameters are established.

    Like KAGRA, it will be located underground to reduce seismic noise and "gravity gradient noise" caused by nearby moving objects.

    The arms will be 10 km long (compared to 4 km for LIGO, and 3 km for Virgo and KAGRA), and like LISA, there will be three arms in an equilateral triangle, with two detectors in each corner.

    In order to measure the polarization of incoming gravitational waves and avoid having an orientation to which the detector is insensitive, a minimum of two detectors are required. While this could be done with two 90° interferometers at 45° to each other, the triangular form allows the arms to be shared. The 60° arm angle reduces the interferometer's sensitivity, but that is made up for by the third detector, and the additional redundancy provides a useful cross-check.

    Each of the three detectors would be composed of two interferometers, one optimized for operation below 30 Hz and one optimized for operation at higher frequencies.

    The low-frequency interferometers (1 to 250 Hz) will use optics cooled to 10 K (−441.7 °F; −263.1 °C), with a beam power of about 18 kW in each arm cavity. The high-frequency ones (10 Hz to 10 kHz) will use room-temperature optics and a much higher recirculating beam power of 3 MW.

    References

    Einstein Telescope Wikipedia


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