76 research outputs found
Analysis of ring laser gyroscopes including laser dynamics
Inertial sensors stimulate very large interest, not only for their
application but also for fundamental physics tests. Ring laser gyros, which
measure angular rotation rate, are certainly among the most sensitive inertial
sensors, with excellent dynamic range and bandwidth. Large area ring laser
gyros are routinely able to measure fractions of prad/s, with high duty cycle
and bandwidth, providing fast, direct and local measurement of relevant
geodetic and geophysical signals. Improvements of a factor would open
the windows for general relativity tests, as the GINGER project, an Earth based
experiment aiming at the Lense-Thirring test at level. However, it is
well known that the dynamics of the laser induces non-linearities, and those
effects are more evident in small scale instruments. Sensitivity and accuracy
improvements are always worthwhile, and in general there is demand for high
sensitivity environmental study and development of inertial platforms, where
small scale transportable instruments should be used. We discuss a novel
technique to analyse the data, aiming at studying and removing those
non-linearity. The analysis is applied to the two ring laser prototypes GP2 and
GINGERINO, and angular rotation rate evaluated with the new and standard
methods are compared. The improvement is evident, it shows that the
back-scatter problem of the ring laser gyros is negligible with a proper
analysis of the data, improving the performances of large scale ring laser
gyros, but also indicating that small scale instruments with sensitivity of
nrad/s are feasible.Comment: 9 pages and 7 figure
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
Measuring the Virgo area tilt noise with a laser gyroscope
We report on the measurements of tilt noise performed at the Virgo site with
a ring laser gyroscope. The apparatus is a He-Ne laser operating in a square
cavity mounted on a vertical plane perpendicular to the north-south arm of the
inteferometer. We discuss the possibility of using the ring laser signal to
improve the performances of the control system of the Virgo seismic
suspensions. The comparison between the ring laser signal and the control
signals for the longitudinal translations of the inverted pendulum (IP) shows
remarkable coherence in the frequency range 20-200 mHz.Comment: 4 pages, Proceedings of 46th Rencontres de Morion
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
Comparative analysis of local angular rotation between the Ring Laser Gyroscope GINGERINO and GNSS stations
The study of local deformations is a hot topic in geodesy. Local rotations of
the crust around the vertical axis can be caused by deformations. In the Gran
Sasso area the ring laser prototype GINGERINO and the GNSS array are operative.
One year of data of GINGERINO is compared with the ones from the GNSS stations,
homogeneously selected around the position of GINGERINO, aiming at looking for
rotational signals with period of days common to both systems. At that purpose
the rotational component of the area circumscribed by the GNSS stations has
been evaluated and compared with the GINGERINO data. The coherences between the
signals show structures that even exceed 60 coherence over the 6-60 days
period; to validate this unprecedented analysis two different methods have been
used to evaluate the local rotation using the GNSS stations. The analysis
reveals that the shared rotational signal's amplitude in both instruments is
approximately , an order of magnitude lower than the amplitudes
of the signals examined using the coherence method. The ring laser array GINGER
is at present under construction, and the confrontation of the ring laser data
with GNSS antennas provides evidence of the fruibility and validity of the ring
laser data for very low frequency investigation
Three-axial Fiber Bragg Grating Strain Sensor for Volcano Monitoring
Fiber optic and FBGs sensors have attained a large diffusion in the last years as cost-effective monitoring and
diagnostic devices in civil engineering. However, in spite of their potential impact, these instruments have found
very limited application in geophysics. In order to study earthquakes and volcanoes, the measurement of crustal
deformation is of crucial importance. Stress and strain behaviour is among the best indicators of changes in the
activity of volcanoes .. Deep bore-hole dilatometers and strainmeters have been employed for volcano monitoring.
These instruments are very sensitive and reliable, but are not cost-effective and their installation requires a large
effort. Fiber optic based devices offer low cost, small size, wide frequency band, easier deployment and even the
possibility of creating a local network with several sensors linked in an array.
We present the realization, installation and first results of a shallow-borehole (8,5 meters depth) three-axial Fiber
Bragg Grating (FBG) strain sensor prototype. This sensor has been developed in the framework of the MED-SUV
project and installed on Etna volcano, in the facilities of the Serra La Nave astrophysical observatory. The
installation siteis about 7 Km South-West of the summit craters, at an elevation of about 1740 m. The main goal
of our work is the realization of a three-axial device having a high resolution and accuracy in static and dynamic
strain measurements, with special attention to the trade-off among resolution, cost and power consumption.
The sensor structure and its read-out system are innovative and offer practical advantages in comparison with
traditional strain meters. Here we present data collected during the first five months of operation. In particular, the
very clear signals recorded in the occurrence of the Central Italy seismic event of October 30th demonstrate the
performances of our device.PublishedWien7TM. Sviluppo e Trasferimento Tecnologic
Horizontal rotation signals detected by "G-Pisa" ring laser for the Mw=9.0, March 2011, Japan earthquake
We report the observation of the ground rotation induced by the Mw=9.0, 11th
of March 2011, Japan earthquake. The rotation measurements have been conducted
with a ring laser gyroscope operating in a vertical plane, thus detecting
rotations around the horizontal axis. Comparison of ground rotations with
vertical accelerations from a co-located force-balance accelerometer shows
excellent ring laser coupling at periods longer than 100s. Under the plane wave
assumption, we derive a theoretical relationship between horizontal rotation
and vertical acceleration for Rayleigh waves. Due to the oblique mounting of
the gyroscope with respect to the wave direction-of-arrival, apparent
velocities derived from the acceleration / rotation rate ratio are expected to
be always larger than, or equal to the true wave propagation velocity. This
hypothesis is confirmed through comparison with fundamental-mode, Rayleigh wave
phase velocities predicted for a standard Earth model.Comment: Accepted for publication in Journal of Seismolog
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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