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LIGO, Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, is a large-scale physics experiment aiming to directly detect gravitational waves. The device measures the phase shift laser beams.

If I understand this well, the measurement assumes that a suitable gravitational wave reduces and lengthens one of the tubes and the extension will be detected by the phase-shifting laser beams.

But I think if there's a gravitational wave that passes through it, it will affect everything, even the laser beam. This means that when the wave lengthens or shortens the tube, it also lengthens or shortens the wavelength of the laser beam.

In my opinion, therefore, this device does not work. Or am I wrong?

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2 Answers 2

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LIGO has now observed gravitational waves, so the theory for it working is clearly sound.

The light path itself is also affected by the gravitational wave. The Wikipedia article on LIGO says,

Note that the effective length change and the resulting phase change are a subtle tidal effect that must be carefully computed because the light waves are affected by the gravitational wave just as much as the beams themselves.

Wikipedia then provides a link to Chapter 27 of Kip Thorne's lecture series on Classical Mechanics. Section 27.6 of that Chapter covers, in great detail, how LIGO would actually work. In the idealized model, the gravitational waves (as seen in a local Lorentz frame of LIGO) change the length of the arms by an amount $\delta x=\frac12h_+\ell_x$ and $\delta_y=-\frac12h_+\ell_y$ where $h_+(t)$ is the gravitational wave (i.e., the increase in $x$ length is coincided by a decrease in the $y$ length of the same amount). The phase caused by this difference can be calculated to be $$ \Delta\varphi(t)=\omega_0\,2\left(\delta x-\delta y\right)=\omega_0\left(\ell_x+\ell_y\right)h_+(t) $$ where $\omega_0$ is the light's angular frequency (and $c=1$).

Since there is a phase shift, then the light intensity being sent to the photodetectors are also being modified, with the intensity linearly proportional to the phase shift, which leads it to being directly proportional to the gravitational wave: $$ \Delta I_{PD}(t)\propto\Delta\varphi(t)=2\omega_0\ell h_+ $$ where we've assumed $\ell_x\approx\ell_y\equiv\ell$. There is a bit more detail involved in getting a real signal from a real set up (e.g., accounting for local gravity), but the basis for LIGO is essentially the above.

Note that the phase shift itself isn't caused by the lengthening and shortening of the paths because the wavelength of light also changes by this factor. Instead, it is measuring the arrival time of the crests and troughs of the light wave between the two arms (cf. this LIGO Science Collaboration FAQ page or this Physics World article on the discovery), so it is more of a stopwatch than a ruler.

Thorne's notes also show the predicted signal LIGO should make, enter image description here

which looks remarkably like the real signal real signal
(source)

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    $\begingroup$ I must be being a bit thick - why is there a phase shift? Isn't the wavelength along the arms changed by exactly the same factor? $\endgroup$
    – ProfRob
    Commented Feb 12, 2016 at 11:52
  • $\begingroup$ @RobJeffries: It's interferometer, so since the two beams aren't traveling the same length anymore, one is longer & the other shorter, there is an interference pattern, cf. the LIGO science collaboration FAQ. $\endgroup$
    – Kyle Kanos
    Commented Feb 12, 2016 at 13:01
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    $\begingroup$ Still not getting it. I know what an interferometer is. The phase of the wave at the detector $\phi_1 = mod(d_1/\lambda)$, where $d_1$ is the path length in arm 1, with a similar expression in arm 2. When you change the length of an interferometer arm you are keeping the wavelength constant - this results in a change in $\phi_1-\phi_2$. Why doesn't a gravitational wave change $d_1$ and $\lambda$ by the same factor resulting in no phase change. I'd be happy for an upvoter to set me straight... it obviously works! $\endgroup$
    – ProfRob
    Commented Feb 12, 2016 at 13:21
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    $\begingroup$ @RobJeffries: Hmm, seems I'm explaining it wrong, as this is answered at the aforementioned LSC: the interference pattern doesn't come about because of the difference between the length of the arm and the wavelength of the light. Instead it's caused by the different arrival time of the light wave's "crests and troughs" from one arm with the arrival time of the light that traveled in the other arm. $\endgroup$
    – Kyle Kanos
    Commented Feb 12, 2016 at 13:27
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    $\begingroup$ @Kyslik: Yes, the wave we observed was produced at the point of the merger. Gravitational wave is the correct term because it is a wave as physicists define it and its origins is through gravity. I guess a spacetime distortion would be anything that distorts flat spacetime (i.e., gravity wells) and not just GWs. $\endgroup$
    – Kyle Kanos
    Commented Feb 15, 2016 at 12:45
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I have decided to add an answer to this because it is about the most commonly asked non-trivial question about the whole process that I have encountered. The paradox is that you can think about the detection in two ways. On the one hand you can imagine that the lengths of the detector arms change and that the round-trip travel time of a light beam is subsequently changed and so the difference in the time-of-arrival of wavecrests translates into a phase difference that is detected in the interferometer. On the other hand you have the analogy to the expansion of the universe - if the arm length is changed, then isn't the wavelength of the light changed by exactly the same factor and so there can be no change in the phase difference?

Clearly, the latter cannot be true. There is an excellent discussion of this by Saulson 1997, from which I give a summary.

Interpretation 1:

If the two arms are in the $x$ and $y$ directions and the incoming wave the $z$ direction, then the metric due to the wave can be written $$ds^2 = -c^2 dt^2 + (1+ h(t))dx^2 + (1-h(t))dy^2,$$ where $h(t)$ is the strain of the gravitational wave.

For light with $ds^2=0$ this means that (considering only the arm aligned along the x-axis for a moment) $$c dt = \sqrt{(1 + h(t))}dx \simeq (1 + \frac{1}{2}h(t))dx$$ The time taken to travel the path is therefore $$\tau_+ = \int dt = \frac{1}{c}\int (1 + \frac{1}{2}h(t))dx$$

If the original arm is of length $L$ and the perturbed arm length is $L(1+h)$, then the time difference for a photon to make the round trip along each arm is $$ \Delta \tau = \tau_+ - \tau_- \simeq \frac{2L}{c}h$$ leading to a phase difference in the signals of $$\Delta \phi = \frac{4\pi L}{\lambda} h$$ This assumes that $h(t)$ can be treated as a constant $h$ whilst the light is in the apparatus.

Interpretation 2:

In analogy with the expansion of the universe, the gravitational wave does change the wavelength of light in each arm of the experiment. However, only the waves that are in the apparatus as the gravitational wave passes through can be affected.

Suppose that $h(t)$ is a step function so that the arm changes length from $L$ to $L+h(0)$ instantaneously. The waves that are just arriving back at the detector will be unaffected by this change, but subsequent wavecrests will have had successively further to travel and so there is a phase lag that builds up gradually to the value defined above in interpretation 1. The time taken for the phase lag to build up will be $2L/c$.

But then what about the waves that enter the apparatus later? For those, the laser frequency is unchanged and as the speed of light is constant, then the wavelength is unchanged. These waves travel in a lengthened arm and therefore experience a phase lag exactly equivalent to interpretation 1.

In practice, the "buildup time" for the phase lag is short compared with the reciprocal of the frequency of the gravitational waves. For example the LIGO path length is about 1000 km, so the "build up time" would be 0.003 s compared with the reciprocal of the $\sim 100$ Hz signal of 0.01 s and so is relatively unimportant when interpreting the signal. For higher frequency signals, there is indeed a reduction in the sensitivity of the instrument.

There is no paradox between the the two ways of thinking about this. So, you are correct that the wave changes both the lengths of the arms and the wavelength of light in the arms, but (obviously) incorrect that it prevents the instrument working.

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  • $\begingroup$ 300 km ? is that right $\endgroup$
    – Fattie
    Commented Feb 13, 2016 at 14:49
  • $\begingroup$ @JoeBlow: I think it's actually longer. This LIGO FAQ says that the light is reflected 400 times each of the 4km arms before merging, so it's actually about 1600 km long! $\endgroup$
    – Kyle Kanos
    Commented Feb 13, 2016 at 15:02
  • $\begingroup$ I asked (or re-asked) yet another angle on clarifying the .. ontology of the spacetime metric .. over here physics.stackexchange.com/questions/235556/… @RobJeffries $\endgroup$
    – Fattie
    Commented Feb 13, 2016 at 15:24
  • $\begingroup$ They aren't the same, though, are they? In 1., there is a constant phase difference between light of identical frequency from the arms. In 2., the frequencies of light from the arms differ. $\endgroup$
    – innisfree
    Commented Feb 20, 2016 at 11:59
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    $\begingroup$ "the gravitational wave does change the wavelength of light in each arm of the experiment. " this doesn't happen in case 1. $\endgroup$
    – innisfree
    Commented Feb 20, 2016 at 22:37

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