Profile Information
- Affiliation
- Associate Professor, Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace Exploration AgencyAssociate Professor, Graduate School of Science Department of Physics, The University of TokyoAffiliated Associate Professor, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Systems Engineering, Hosei University
- Researcher number
- 20816657
- ORCID ID
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3405-8334- J-GLOBAL ID
- 202001003658123136
- researchmap Member ID
- R000013368
Research highlights and news
See blog posts
Hello world!
I am an experimental astrophysicist with the main focuse set on gravitational wave searches and precision laser interferometry. My ultimate goal is to directly probe the very early Universe by observing primordial gravitational-wave backgrounds. I am currently an associate professor in the Space Astronomy and Astrophysics Department of ISAS, working for LISA, KAGRA and SILVIA by conduting a number of laboratory-scale experiemnts.
If you are interested in joining our group at ISAS in JAXA, please feel free to contact me.
Hobbies: reading, bonfiring, guitar (electric and acoustic) , studying Yokai
Video archive (1): AW80T, IYA2009 (K. Arai, D. Tatsumi and me in 2009)
Video archive (2): BS visual inspection (R. X. Adhikari and me in 2010)
Video archive (3): A scen behind LHO HIFO test (S. Ballmer, C. Wipf and me in 2013)
Video archive (4): ISAS pictograms (by Go Murakami and ISAS online open day executive committee, 2022)
Research Interests
5Research History
7-
Apr, 2025 - Present
Education
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2007 - 2012
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2003 - 2007
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2000 - 2003
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1997 - 2000
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1991 - 1997
Committee Memberships
26-
Jun, 2025 - Present
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Jun, 2025 - Present
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May, 2025 - Present
Awards
13Papers
187-
Classical and Quantum Gravity, Nov 4, 2025Abstract DECIGO (DECi-hertz Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory) is a space-based gravitational wave antenna concept targeting the 0.1--10 Hz band. It consists of three spacecraft arranged in an equilateral triangle with 1,000 km sides, forming Fabry-P{'e}rot cavities between them. A precursor mission, B-DECIGO, is also planned, featuring a smaller 100 km triangle. Operating these cavities requires ultra-precise formation flying, where inter-mirror distance and alignment must be precisely controlled. Achieving this necessitates a sequential improvement in precision using various sensors and actuators, from the deployment of the spacecraft to laser link acquisition and ultimately to the control of the Fabry-P{'e}rot cavities to maintain resonance. In this paper, we derive the precision requirements at each stage and discuss the feasibility of achieving them. We show that the relative speed between cavity mirrors must be controlled at the sub-micrometer-per-second level and that relative alignment must be maintained at the sub-microradian level to obtain control signals from the Fabry-P{'e}rot cavities of DECIGO and B-DECIGO.
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Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan, 77(5) 1080-1089, Aug 21, 2025Abstract We propose a mission concept, called the space interferometer laboratory voyaging towards innovative applications (SILVIA), designed to demonstrate ultra-precision formation flying between three spacecraft separated by 100 m. SILVIA aims to achieve submicrometer precision in relative distance control by integrating spacecraft sensors, laser interferometry, low-thrust, and low-noise micro-propulsion for real-time measurement and control of distances and relative orientations between spacecraft. A 100 m scale mission in a near-circular low Earth orbit has been identified as an ideal, cost-effective setting for demonstrating SILVIA, as this configuration maintains a good balance between small relative perturbations and low risk of collision. This mission will fill the current technology gap towards future missions, including gravitational wave observatories such as the decihertz interferometer gravitational wave observatory (DECIGO), designed to detect the primordial gravitational-wave background, and high-contrast nulling infrared interferometers such as the large interferometer for exoplanets (LIFE), designed for direct imaging of thermal emissions from nearby terrestrial planet candidates. The mission concept and its key technologies are outlined, paving the way for the next generation of high-precision space-based observatories.
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Classical and Quantum Gravity, 42(10) 105007-105007, May 14, 2025 Peer-reviewedAbstract Future gravitational wave observation in space will demand improvement in the sensitivity of the local sensor for the drag-free control. This paper presents the proposal, design, and demonstration of a new laser interferometric sensor named Quadrature Interferometric Metrology of Translation and Tilt (QUIMETT) for the drag-free local sensor. QUIMETT enables simultaneous measurements of both translational displacement and tilts of a reflective object with a single interferometer package. QUIMETT offers a characteristic feature where the sensitivity to tilt is independent of the interference condition while maintaining the ability to measure the translational displacement for a range greater than the laser wavelength. The tilt-sensing function has been demonstrated in a prototype experiment. The tilt sensitivity remained unchanged in different interference conditions and stayed at 10 nrad Hz at 0.1 Hz.
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Physical Review D, 111(8), Apr 15, 2025 Peer-reviewedCorresponding author
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IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science, 71(8) 1914-1923, Aug, 2024 Peer-reviewed
Misc.
50-
arXiv:Optics (physics.optics), 2602.20538, Feb, 2026 Last author
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The Astronomical Herald, Astronomical Society of Japan, 117(7) 458-463, Jun, 2024 InvitedCorresponding author
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28th IUGG General Assembly, G06p-024, Jul, 2023
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arXiv:2305.06579, May 11, 2023
Books and Other Publications
7Presentations
44-
JPL/ISAS workshop, JAXA Sgamihara Campus, Feb 16, 2026 Invited
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Multimessenger Astronomy Beyond the Standard Model and Quantum Sensing (Q-EYES 2025), Dec 10, 2025, the International Center for Quantum-field Measurement Systems for Studies of the Universe and Particles InvitedThe detection of gravitational waves on ground has become a routine nowadays, providing various insight into astrophysics of compact objects and fundamental physics. While the ground-based detectors probe compact objects in the stellar mass range, the future space gravitational wave missions are expected to probe those with heavier masses. However, such a bright future would not be achieved without instrumentation activities because nobody has ever achieved the space gravitational wave detection to date. This talk aims to give an update on the research field and highlight some of the instrumentation activities, inviting discussion for possible synergies with other studies.
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NAOJ ATC users meeting, Sep 24, 2025
Teaching Experience
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May, 2024 - May, 2024Intensive course ``Gravitational wave observations and associated technologies'' (Kyushu University, Faculty of Science)
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Oct, 2023 - Feb, 2024Physics Seminar (The University of Tokyo)
Professional Memberships
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2022 - Present
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2019 - Present
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2017 - Present
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2014 - Present
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2009 - Present
Research Projects
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科学研究費助成事業, 日本学術振興会, Jun, 2024 - Mar, 2028
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科学研究費助成事業, 日本学術振興会, Apr, 2024 - Mar, 2027
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科学研究費助成事業 基盤研究(B), 日本学術振興会, Apr, 2020 - Mar, 2023
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戦略的研究開発経費, 宇宙航空研究開発機構宇宙科学研究所宇宙理学委員会, Apr, 2022 - Oct, 2022
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戦略的開発研究費, 宇宙航空研究開発機構宇宙科学研究所宇宙工学委員会, Apr, 2021 - Mar, 2022
Academic Activities
16-
Panel moderator, Session chair, etc.National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, Feb 26, 2026 - Feb 26, 2026
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Panel moderator, Session chair, etc.Astronomical Society of Japan, Sep 11, 2025 - Sep 11, 2025
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Panel moderator, Session chair, etc.National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, Apr 16, 2025 - Apr 17, 2025
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OthersJAXA (JAXA Tanegashima Space Center), Aug 14, 2023 - Aug 24, 2023
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Review, evaluationGottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität Hannover, Germany, Jul, 2023 - Aug, 2023
Social Activities
33Other
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2021 - PresentA member for propelling the technological front-loading activities
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Jan, 2026 - Jan, 2026ミッションに関わる中で考えたこと https://www.isas.jaxa.jp/missions/documents/files/isas_202601_2.pdf
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Jun, 2025 - Jun, 2025https://www.isas.jaxa.jp/outreach/isas_news/files/ISASnews531.pdf
教育内容やその他の工夫
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SubjcetWeekly communicationSummaryA meeting for at least 1 hr a week for each student.
Plus, we have a lab-wide meeting a week and a journal club biweekly for all the students.
● 自由記述
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Free text columnIf it's not fun, it is not a science
● 指導学生等の数
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Fiscal Year2025年度(FY2025)Doctoral program1Master’s program2Students under Cooperative Graduate School System2Students under Skills Acquisition System2
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Fiscal Year2024年度(FY2024)Master’s program1Students under Cooperative Graduate School System3Students under Skills Acquisition System1
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Fiscal Year2023年度(FY2023)Doctoral program1Master’s program1Students under Cooperative Graduate School System3Students under Skills Acquisition System1
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Fiscal Year2022年度(FY2022)Doctoral program1Students under Cooperative Graduate School System2Students under Skills Acquisition System2
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Fiscal Year2021年度(FY2021)Students under Cooperative Graduate School System2Students under Skills Acquisition System1
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Fiscal Year2020年度(FY2020)Students under Cooperative Graduate School System2Students under Skills Acquisition System1
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Fiscal Year2019年度(FY2019)Students under Cooperative Graduate School System2
● 指導学生の顕著な論文
3-
Student nameKarera MoriStudent affiliationHosei UniversityAuthor(s), journal, volume number, pagination (year of publication)K. Nagano, K. Mori and K. Izumi, Class. Quantum Grav. 42 105007 (2025)TitleDemonstration of tilt sensing using a homodyne quadrature interferometric translational sensorDOI10.1088/1361-6382/add3b4
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Student nameYusuke OkumaStudent affiliationThe University of TokyoAuthor(s), journal, volume number, pagination (year of publication)Y. Okuma et al., Phys. Rev. D 111, 082006TitleCross-correlated force measurement for thermal noise reduction in torsion pendulumDOIhttps://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.111.082006
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Student nameRyosuke SugimotoStudent affiliationThe Graduate Institute for Advanced Studies, SOKENDAIAuthor(s), journal, volume number, pagination (year of publication)R. Sugimoto, et al., Phys. Rev. D 109, 022003 (2024)TitleExperimental demonstration of back-linked Fabry-Perot interferometer for a space gravitational wave antennaDOIhttps://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.109.022003