46 research outputs found
Optical absorption of ion-beam sputtered amorphous silicon coatings
Low mechanical loss at low temperatures and a high index of refraction should make silicon
optimally suited for thermal noise reduction in highly reflective mirror coatings for gravitational wave
detectors. However, due to high optical absorption, amorphous silicon (aSi) is unsuitable for being used
as a direct high-index coating material to replace tantala. A possible solution is a multimaterial design,
which enables exploitation of the excellent mechanical properties of aSi in the lower coating layers. The
possible number of aSi layers increases with absorption reduction. In this work, the optimum heat
treatment temperature of aSi deposited via ion-beam sputtering was investigated and found to be 450 °C.
For this temperature, the absorption after deposition of a single layer of aSi at 1064 nm and 1550 nm
was reduced by more than 80%
Investigating the medium range order in amorphous Ta<sub>2</sub>O<sub>5</sub> coatings
Ion-beam sputtered amorphous heavy metal oxides, such as Ta2O5, are widely used as the high refractive index layer of highly reflective dielectric coatings. Such coatings are used in the ground based Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO), in which mechanical loss, directly related to Brownian thermal noise, from the coatings forms an important limit to the sensitivity of the LIGO detector. It has previously been shown that heat-treatment and TiO2 doping of amorphous Ta2O5 coatings causes significant changes to the levels of mechanical loss measured and is thought to result from changes in the atomic structure. This work aims to find ways to reduce the levels of mechanical loss in the coatings by understanding the atomic structure properties that are responsible for it, and thus helping to increase the LIGO detector sensitivity. Using a combination of Reduced Density Functions (RDFs) from electron diffraction and Fluctuation Electron Microscopy (FEM), we probe the medium range order (in the 2-3 nm range) of these amorphous coatings
Cryogenic mechanical loss of a single-crystalline GaP coating layer for precision measurement applications
The first direct observations of gravitational waves have been made by the Advanced LIGO detectors.
However, the quest to improve the sensitivities of these detectors remains, and epitaxially grown single-crystal
coatings show considerable promise as alternatives to the ion-beam sputtered amorphous mirror
coatings typically used in these detectors and other such precision optical measurements. The mechanical
loss of a 1 μm thick single-crystalline gallium phosphide (GaP) coating, incorporating a buffer layer region
necessary for the growth of high quality epitaxial coatings, has been investigated over a broad range of
frequencies and with fine temperature resolution. It is shown that at 20 K the mechanical loss of GaP is a
factor of 40 less than an undoped tantala film heat-treated to 600 °C and is comparable to the loss of a
multilayer GaP/AlGaP coating. This is shown to translate into possible reductions in coating thermal noise
of a factor of 2 at 120 K and 5 at 20 K over the current best IBS coatings (alternating stacks of silica and
titania-doped tantala). There is also evidence of a thermally activated dissipation process between 50 and
70 K
Titania-doped tantala/silica coatings for gravitational-wave detection
Reducing thermal noise from optical coatings is crucial to reaching the required sensitivity in next generation interferometric gravitational-wave detectors. Here we show that adding TiO2 to Ta2O5 in Ta2O5/SiO2 coatings reduces the internal friction and in addition present data confirming it reduces thermal noise. We also show that TiO2-doped Ta2O5/SiO2 coatings are close to satisfying the optical absorption requirements of second generation gravitational-wave detectors
Order within disorder: The atomic structure of ion-beam sputtered amorphous tantala (a-Ta_2O_5)
Amorphous tantala (a-Ta_2O_5) is a technologically important material often used in high-performance coatings. Understanding this material at the atomic level provides a way to further improve performance. This work details extended X-ray absorption fine structure measurements of a-Ta_2O_5 coatings, where high-quality experimental data and theoretical fits have allowed a detailed interpretation of the nearest-neighbor distributions. It was found that the tantalum atom is surrounded by four shells of atoms in sequence; oxygen, tantalum, oxygen, and tantalum. A discussion is also included on how these models can be interpreted within the context of published crystalline Ta 2O5 and other a-T_2O_5 studies
Optical coatings for gravitational wave detection
Gravitational waves are a prediction of Einstein's General Theory of Relativity. Astrophysical events like supernova and binary neutron star inspirals are predicted to create potentially detectable waves. The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) is an experiment to detect these waves using Michelson interferometers with 4 km long arms. The effect of gravitational waves, even on an interferometer with such a long baseline, is extremely, with mirror displacements around 10^(-18)m. Reducing noise is thus a primary design criterion. For the next generation interferometers now being designed, thermal noise from the optical coatings of the interferometer mirrors could prove a problematic limiting noise source. Reducing the mechanical loss of these coatings to improve thermal noise, while preserving the sub-ppm optical absorption, low scatter, and high reflectivity needed in the interferometer is an important area of research
Titania-doped tantala/silica coatings for gravitational-wave detection
Reducing thermal noise from optical coatings is crucial to reaching the required sensitivity in next generation interferometric gravitational-waves detectors. Here we show that adding TiO to TaO in TaO/SiO coatings reduces the internal friction and in addition present data confirming it reduces thermal noise. We also show that TiO-doped TaO/SiO coatings are close to satisfying the optical absorption requirements of second generation gravitational-wave detectors
A Cryogenic Silicon Interferometer for Gravitational-wave Detection
The detection of gravitational waves from compact binary mergers by LIGO has opened the era of gravitational wave astronomy, revealing a previously hidden side of the cosmos. To maximize the reach of the existing LIGO observatory facilities, we have designed a new instrument able to detect gravitational waves at distances 5 times further away than possible with Advanced LIGO, or at greater than 100 times the event rate. Observations with this new instrument will make possible dramatic steps toward understanding the physics of the nearby Universe, as well as observing the Universe out to cosmological distances by the detection of binary black hole coalescences. This article presents the instrument design and a quantitative analysis of the anticipated noise floor
