Publication Date:
2017
abstract:
GINGER (Gyroscopes IN General Relativity) is a proposal for an Earth-based experiment to
measure the Lense-Thirring (LT) and de Sitter effects. GINGER is based on ring lasers, which are the
most sensitive inertial sensors to measure the rotation rate of the Earth. We show that two ring lasers, one
at maximum signal and the other horizontal, would be the simplest configuration able to retrieve the GR
effects. Here, we discuss this configuration in detail showing that it would have the capability to test LT
effect at 1%, provided the accuracy of the scale factor of the instrument at the level of 1 part in 1012 is
reached. In principle, one single ring laser could do the test, but the combination of the two ring lasers gives
the necessary redundancy and the possibility to verify that the systematics of the lasers are sufficiently
small. The discussion can be generalised to seismology and geodesy and it is possible to say that signals
10-12 orders of magnitude below the Earth rotation rate can be studied; the proposed array can be seen
as the basic element of multi-axial systems, and the generalisation to three dimensions is feasible adding
one or two devices and monitoring the relative angles between different ring lasers. This simple array can
be used to measure with very high precision the amplitude of angular rotation rate (the length of the day,
LOD), its short term variations, and the angle between the angular rotation vector and the horizontal
ring laser. Finally this experiment could be useful to probe gravity at fundamental level giving indications
on violations of Einstein Equivalence Principle and Lorenz Invariance and possible chiral effects in the
gravitational field.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
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List of contributors:
Porzio, Alberto
Published in: