Quantum Gravity

Detecting single gravitons with gravitational wave detectorsConfirmed

by Germain Tobar (Stockholm University)

America/Toronto
PI/4-405 - Bob Room (Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics)

PI/4-405 - Bob Room

Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

60
Description
The quantization of gravity is widely believed to result in gravitons -- particles of discrete energy that form gravitational waves. But their detection has so far been considered impossible. In this talk, I will show that laboratory experiments can reveal signatures of single graviton exchange. I will outline how both interferometric and resonant-mass gravitational wave detectors can be adapted into single graviton detectors with future detector modifications. Drawing a close analogy to the photoelectric effect, I will argue that such experiments may offer the first direct evidence for the quantum nature of gravity.
 
References:
[1] G. Tobar, S. K. Manikandan, T. Beitel, and I. Pikovski, “Detecting single gravitons with quantum sensing,” Nature Communications, vol. 15, no. 7229, 2024. [arXiv:2308.15440]
Organised by

Laurent Freidel, Joshua Kirklin