69 research outputs found
First deep underground observation of rotational signals from an earthquake at teleseismic distance using a large ring laser gyroscope
Recent advances in large ring laser gyroscopes (RLG) technologies opened the
possibility to observe rotations of the ground with sensitivities up to
over the frequency band of seismological interest
(0.01-1Hz), thus opening the way to a new geophysical discipline, i.e.
rotational seismology. A measure of rotations in seismology is of fundamental
interest for (a) the determination of all the six degrees of freedom that
characterize a rigid body motion, and (b) the quantitative estimate of the
rotational motions contaminating ground translation measurements obtained from
standard seismometers. Within this framework, this paper presents and describes
GINGERino, a new large observatory-class RLG located in Gran Sasso underground
laboratory (LNGS), one national laboratories of the INFN (Istituto Nazionale di
Fisica Nucleare). We also report unprecedented observations and analyses of the
roto-translational signals from a tele-seismic event observed in such a deep
underground environment
High-Accuracy Ring Laser Gyroscopes: Earth Rotation Rate and Relativistic Effects
The Gross Ring G is a square ring laser gyroscope, built as a monolithic Zerodur structure with 4 m length on all sides. It has demonstrated that a large ring laser provides a sensitivity high enough to measure the rotational rate of the Earth with a high precision of ∆ΩE < 10-8. It is possible to show that further improvement in accuracy could allow the observation of the metric frame dragging, produced by the Earth rotating mass (Lense-Thirring effect), as predicted by General Relativity. Furthermore, it can provide a local measurement of the Earth rotational rate with a sensitivity near to that provided by the international system IERS. The GINGER project is intending to take this level of sensitivity further and to improve the accuracy and the long-term stability. A monolithic structure similar to the G ring laser is not available for GINGER. Therefore the preliminary goal is the demonstration of the feasibility of a larger gyroscope structure, where the mechanical stability is obtained through an active control of the geometry. A prototype moderate size gyroscope (GP-2) has been set up in Pisa in order to test this active control of the ring geometry, while a second structure (GINGERino) has been installed inside the Gran Sasso underground laboratory in order to investigate the properties of a deep underground laboratory in view of an installation of a future GINGER apparatus. The preliminary data on these two latter instruments are presented
A realistic inversion algorithm for magnetic anomaly data: the Mt. Amiata volcano test
The aim of this work is the formulation of a 3D model of the Mt. Amiata volcanic complex (Southern Tuscany)
by means of geomagnetic data. This work is shown not only as a real test to check the validity of the inversion
algorithm, but also to add information about the structure of the volcanic complex. First, we outline briefly the
theory of geomagnetic data inversion and we introduce the approach adopted. Then we show the 3D model of the
Amiata volcano built from the inversion, and we compare it with the available geological information. The most
important consideration regards the surface distribution of the magnetization that is in good agreement with rock
samples from this area. Moreover, the recovered model orientation recall the extension of the lava flows, and as a
last proof of validity, the source appears to be contained inside of the topographic contour level. The credibility of
the inversion procedure drives the interpretation even for the deepest part of the volcano. The geomagnetic signal
appears suppressed at a depth of about 2 km, but the most striking consequence is that sub-vertical structures are
found even in different positions from the conduits shown in the geologic sections. The results are thus in good
agreement with the information obtained from other data, but showing features that had not been identified, stressing
the informative power of the geomagnetic signal when a meaningful inversion algorithm is used
GINGER: A feasibility study
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
First deep underground observation of rotational signals from an earthquake at teleseismic distance using a large ring laser gyroscope
Recent advances in large ring laser gyroscopes (RLG) technologies opened the possibility to observe rotations of the ground with sensitivities up to 10 11 rad/sec over the frequency band of seismological interest (0.01-1Hz), thus opening the way to a new geophysical discipline, i.e. rotational seismology. A measure of rotations in seismology is of fundamental interest for (a) the determination of all the six degrees of freedom that characterize a rigid body’s motion, and (b) the quantitative estimate of the rotational motions contaminating ground translation measurements obtained from standard seismometers. Within this framework, this paper presents and describes GINGERino, a new large observatory-class RLG located in Gran Sasso underground laboratory (LNGS), one national laboratories of the INFN (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare). We also report unprecedented observations and analyses of the roto-translational signals from a tele-seismic event observed in such a deep underground environment
Fiber laser strain sensor device
We present a fiber laser strain sensor (FLSS) with noise-equivalent sensitivity equal to or better than 80?p?rms?(Hz)?1/2 at very low frequencies, from 100?mHz to several hundreds of hertz. The strain affects the fiber laser emission wavelength, and an imbalanced Mach?Zender interferometer (MZI) converts wavelength variations into phase-amplitude variations. The sensor has been also tested in the time domain by applying sinusoidal strain bursts: the device also shows a good signal-to-noise ratio at the lowest burst frequencies
An underground Sagnac gyroscope with sub-prad/s rotation rate sensitivity: toward General Relativity tests on Earth
Measuring in a single location on Earth its angular rotation rate with
respect to the celestial frame, with a sensitivity enabling access to the tiny
Lense-Thirring effect is an extremely challenging task. GINGERINO is a large
frame ring laser gyroscope, operating free running and unattended inside the
underground laboratory of the Gran Sasso, Italy. The main geodetic signals,
i.e., Annual and Chandler wobbles, daily polar motion and Length of the Day,
are recovered from GINGERINO data using standard linear regression methods,
demonstrating a sensitivity better than 1 prad/s, therefore close to the
requirements for an Earth-based Lense-Thirring test.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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