4.5 Article

Prospective sensitivities of atom interferometers to gravitational waves and ultralight dark matter

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2021.0060

Keywords

atom interferometers; gravitational waves; supernovae; dark matter; early universe; binary mergers

Funding

  1. UK STFC [ST/T006994/1, ST/T00679X/1, ST/T000759/1, ST/N004663/1]
  2. Estonian Research Council grant [MOBTT5]
  3. STFC studentship
  4. Polish National Science Center grant [2018/31/D/ST2/02048]
  5. Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange within the Polish Returns Programme [PPN/PPO/2020/1/00013/U/00001]
  6. Spanish MINECO [FPA2017-88915-P, SEV-2016-0588]
  7. Generalitat de Catalunya [2017-SGR-1069]
  8. European Regional Development Fund through the CoE program [TK133]
  9. Mobilitas Pluss [MOBTT5, MOBTP135]
  10. Estonian Research Council [PRG803]
  11. CERCA program of the Generalitat de Catalunya

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study surveys the sensitivities of terrestrial and space-borne atom interferometers to gravitational waves and ultralight dark matter. The article compares the sensitivities of different detectors and discusses the impact of various background noises. It also explores the potential sources of these phenomena.
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/2021-04 KCL-PH-TH/2021-61, CERN-TH-2021-116 This article is part of the theme issue 'Quantum technologies in particle physics'.

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