Vaishali Adya
- Dr, Affiliate
- KTH, Royal Institute of Technology
I obtained my PhD from the Albert Einstein Institute (AEI), Max Planck for Gravitational Physics, Hannover in May, 2018 during which I worked on designing and testing control schemes for future third generation gravitational wave detectors like the Einstein Telescope (a planned European project). I have been a member of the LIGO (Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory) Scientific collaboration since 2013 and worked at LIGO Hanford for a period of 4 months on general commissioning of the detector and also modelling the alignment sensing scheme to control the angular positions of the suspended optics of the detector. During my postdoctoral fellowship at the Australian National University, the focus of my work was development of squeezed light technology (intracavity and external) for present and future gravitational wave detectors and also optical modelling for NEMO, the Australian concept of a kHz band gravitational wave detector.
At KTH, I work predominantly on squeezed light generation in waveguide systems and also on the development and characterisation of integrated squeezed light sources for gravitational wave detection, biosensing and quantum communication.
Research interests
- Non linear optics and Development of squeezed light sources at 1 micron and 1.55 micron
- Optical simulations for current and future ground based gravitational wave detectors
- Integrated photonics and laser interferometry
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