2,932 research outputs found
Oscillator strengths of Ti II from combined hook and emission measurements
It is demonstrated that a large set of accurate oscillator strengths of Ti II can be determined from a combination of hook and emission measurements without any assumption concerning the plasma state. Modified cascaded arcs and hollow cathode discharges have been used as plasma light sources for both hook and emission measurements. The relative f values have been converted to an absolute scale by means of literature data. The overall uncertainties of the f values are about 13-25%. Comparisons with other experimental and theoretical data are made which indicate excellent to fair agreement. Only for one of the published data sets has a wavelength-dependent discrepancy of up to a factor of two been found
Improved Ar(II) transition probabilities
Precise Ar(II) branching ratios have been measured on a high current hollow cathode with a 1-m Fourier transform spectrometer. Absolute transition probabilities for 11 Ar(II) lines were calculated from these branching ratios and lifetime measurements published by Mohamed et al. For the prominent 4806 Å line, the present result is Aik = 7.12×107s-1 ±2.8%, which is in excellent agreement with recent literature data derived from pure argon diagnostics, two-wavelength-interferometry, and Hβ-diagnostics when using the theoretical data of Vidal et al
Coherent control of broadband vacuum squeezing
We present the observation of optical fields carrying squeezed vacuum states
at sideband frequencies from 10Hz to above 35MHz. The field was generated with
type-I optical parametric oscillation below threshold at 1064nm. A coherent,
unbalanced classical modulation field at 40MHz enabled the generation of error
signals for stable phase control of the squeezed vacuum field with respect to a
strong local oscillator. Broadband squeezing of approximately -4dB was measured
with balanced homodyne detection. The spectrum of the squeezed field allows a
quantum noise reduction of ground-based gravitational wave detectors over their
full detection band, regardless of whether homodyne readout or radio-frequency
heterodyne readout is used.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
New design of electrostatic mirror actuators for application in high-precision interferometry
We describe a new geometry for electrostatic actuators to be used in sensitive laser interferometers, suited for prototype and table top experiments related to gravitational wave detection with mirrors of 100 g or less. The arrangement consists of two plates at the sides of the mirror (test mass), and therefore does not reduce its clear aperture as a conventional electrostatic drive (ESD) would do. Using the sample case of the AEI-10 m prototype interferometer, we investigate the actuation range and the influence of the relative misalignment of the ESD plates with respect to the test mass. We find that in the case of the AEI-10 m prototype interferometer, this new kind of ESD could provide a range of 0.28 μm when operated at a voltage of 1 kV. In addition, the geometry presented is shown to provide a reduction factor of about 100 in the magnitude of the actuator motion coupling to the test mass displacement. We show that therefore in the specific case of the AEI-10 m interferometer, it is possible to mount the ESD actuators directly on the optical table without spoiling the seismic isolation performance of the triple stage suspension of the main test masses
Input-output relations for a 3-port grating coupled Fabry-Perot cavity
We analyze an optical 3-port reflection grating by means of a scattering
matrix formalism. Amplitude and phase relations between the 3 ports, i.e. the 3
orders of diffraction are derived. Such a grating can be used as an
all-reflective, low-loss coupler to Fabry-Perot cavities. We derive the input
output relations of a 3-port grating coupled cavity and find distinct
properties not present in 2-port coupled cavities. The cavity relations further
reveal that the 3-port coupler can be designed such that the additional cavity
port interferes destructively. In this case the all-reflective, low-loss,
single-ended Fabry-Perot cavity becomes equivalent to a standard transmissive,
2-port coupled cavity
Laser power stabilization for second-generation gravitational wave detectors
We present results on the power stabilization of a Nd:YAG laser in the frequency band from 1 Hz to 100 kHz. High-power, low-noise photodetectors are used in a dc-coupled control loop to achieve relative power fluctuations down to 5×10−9 Hz−1/2 at 10 Hz and 3.5×10−9 Hz−1/2 up to several kHz, which is very close to the shot-noise limit for 80 mA of detected photocurrent on each detector. We investigated and eliminated several noise sources such as ground loops and beam pointing. The achieved stability level is close to the requirements for the Advanced LIGO gravitational wave detector
Frequency stabilization of a monolithic Nd:YAG ring laser by controlling the power of the laser-diode pump source
The frequency of a 700mW monolithic non-planar Nd:YAG ring laser (NPRO)
depends with a large coupling coefficient (some MHz/mW) on the power of its
laser-diode pump source. Using this effect we demonstrate the frequency
stabilization of an NPRO to a frequency reference by feeding back to the
current of its pump diodes. We achieved an error point frequency noise smaller
than 1mHz/sqrt(Hz), and simultaneously a reduction of the power noise of the
NPRO by 10dB without an additional power stabilization feed-back system.Comment: accepted for publication by Optics Letter
Radiative Evolution of Orbits Around a Kerr Black Hole
We propose a simple approach for the radiative evolution of generic orbits
around a Kerr black hole. For a scalar-field, we recover the standard results
for the evolution of the energy and the azimuthal angular momentum .
In addition, our method provides a closed expression for the evolution of the
Carter constant .Comment: 6 pages, Plain TeX, Published in Phys. Lett. A. 202, 347 (3 July
1995
First stage of LISA data processing: Clock synchronization and arm-length determination via a hybrid-extended Kalman filter
In this paper, we describe a hybrid-extended Kalman filter algorithm to
synchronize the clocks and to precisely determine the inter-spacecraft
distances for space-based gravitational wave detectors, such as (e)LISA.
According to the simulation, the algorithm has significantly improved the
ranging accuracy and synchronized the clocks, making the phase-meter raw
measurements qualified for time- delay interferometry algorithms.Comment: 14 pages, Phys. Rev. D 90, 064016 (2014
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