654 research outputs found
Passive, free-space heterodyne laser gyroscope
Laser gyroscopes making use of the Sagnac effect have been used as highly accurate rotation sensors for many years. First used in aerospace and defense applications, these devices have more recently been used for precision seismology and in other research settings. In particular, mid-sized (~1 m-scale) laser gyros have been under development as tilt sensors to augment the adaptive active seismic isolation systems in terrestrial interferometric gravitational wave detectors. The most prevalent design is the 'active' gyroscope, in which the optical ring cavity used to measure the Sagnac degeneracy breaking is itself a laser resonator. In this article, we describe another topology: a 'passive' gyroscope, in which the sensing cavity is not itself a laser but is instead tracked using external laser beams. While subject to its own limitations, this design is free from the deleterious lock-in effects observed in active systems, and has the advantage that it can be constructed using commercially available components. We demonstrate that our device achieves comparable sensitivity to those of similarly sized active laser gyroscopes
Experimental results for nulling the effective thermal expansion coefficient of fused silica fibres under a static stress
We have experimentally demonstrated that the effective thermal expansion coefficient of a fused silica fibre can be nulled by placing the fibre under a particular level of stress. Our technique involves heating the fibre and measuring how the fibre length changes with temperature as the stress on the fibre was systematically varied. This nulling of the effective thermal expansion coefficient should allow for the complete elimination of thermoelastic noise and is essential for allowing second generation gravitational wave detectors to reach their target sensitivity. To our knowledge this is the first time that the cancelation of the thermal expansion coefficient with stress has been experimentally observed
Invited Article: CO_2 laser production of fused silica fibers for use in interferometric gravitational wave detector mirror suspensions
In 2000 the first mirror suspensions to use a quasi-monolithic final stage were installed at the GEO600 detector site outside Hannover, pioneering the use of fused silica suspension fibers in long baseline interferometric detectors to reduce suspension thermal noise. Since that time, development of the production methods of fused silica fibers has continued. We present here a review of a novel CO_2 laser-based fiber pulling machine developed for the production of fused silica suspensions for the next generation of interferometric gravitational wave detectors and for use in experiments requiring low thermal noise suspensions. We discuss tolerances, strengths, and thermal noise performance requirements for the next generation of gravitational wave detectors. Measurements made on fibers produced using this machine show a 0.8% variation in vertical stiffness and 0.05% tolerance on length, with average strengths exceeding 4 GPa, and mechanical dissipation which meets the requirements for Advanced LIGO thermal noise performance
Silica suspension and coating developments for Advanced LIGO
The proposed upgrade to the LIGO detectors to form the Advanced LIGO detector system is intended to incorporate a low thermal noise monolithic fused silica final stage test mass suspension based on developments of the GEO 600 suspension design. This will include fused silica suspension elements jointed to fused silica test mass substrates, to which dielectric mirror coatings are applied.
The silica fibres used for GEO 600 were pulled using a Hydrogen-Oxygen flame system. This successful system has some limitations, however, that needed to be overcome for the more demanding suspensions required for Advanced LIGO. To this end a fibre pulling machine based on a CO2 laser as the heating element is being developed in Glasgow with funding from EGO and PPARC.
At the moment a significant limitation for proposed detectors like Advanced LIGO is expected to come from the thermal noise of the mirror coatings. An investigation on mechanical losses of silica/tantala coatings was carried out by several labs involved with Advanced LIGO R&D. Doping the tantala coating layer with titania was found to reduce the coating mechanical dissipation. A review of the results is given here
The next detectors for gravitational wave astronomy
This paper focuses on the next detectors for gravitational wave astronomy
which will be required after the current ground based detectors have completed
their initial observations, and probably achieved the first direct detection of
gravitational waves. The next detectors will need to have greater sensitivity,
while also enabling the world array of detectors to have improved angular
resolution to allow localisation of signal sources. Sect. 1 of this paper
begins by reviewing proposals for the next ground based detectors, and presents
an analysis of the sensitivity of an 8 km armlength detector, which is proposed
as a safe and cost-effective means to attain a 4-fold improvement in
sensitivity. The scientific benefits of creating a pair of such detectors in
China and Australia is emphasised. Sect. 2 of this paper discusses the high
performance suspension systems for test masses that will be an essential
component for future detectors, while sect. 3 discusses solutions to the
problem of Newtonian noise which arise from fluctuations in gravity gradient
forces acting on test masses. Such gravitational perturbations cannot be
shielded, and set limits to low frequency sensitivity unless measured and
suppressed. Sects. 4 and 5 address critical operational technologies that will
be ongoing issues in future detectors. Sect. 4 addresses the design of thermal
compensation systems needed in all high optical power interferometers operating
at room temperature. Parametric instability control is addressed in sect. 5.
Only recently proven to occur in Advanced LIGO, parametric instability
phenomenon brings both risks and opportunities for future detectors. The path
to future enhancements of detectors will come from quantum measurement
technologies. Sect. 6 focuses on the use of optomechanical devices for
obtaining enhanced sensitivity, while sect. 7 reviews a range of quantum
measurement options
Search for gravitational waves from low mass compact binary coalescence in LIGO’s sixth science run and Virgo’s science runs 2 and 3
We report on a search for gravitational waves from coalescing compact binaries using LIGO and Virgo observations between July 7, 2009, and October 20, 2010. We searched for signals from binaries with total mass between 2 and 25M_⊙; this includes binary neutron stars, binary black holes, and binaries consisting of a black hole and neutron star. The detectors were sensitive to systems up to 40 Mpc distant for binary neutron stars, and further for higher mass systems. No gravitational-wave signals were detected. We report upper limits on the rate of compact binary coalescence as a function of total mass, including the results from previous LIGO and Virgo observations. The cumulative 90% confidence rate upper limits of the binary coalescence of binary neutron star, neutron star-black hole, and binary black hole systems are 1.3×10^(-4), 3.1×10^(-5), and 6.4×10^(-6)  Mpc^(-3) yr^(-1), respectively. These upper limits are up to a factor 1.4 lower than previously derived limits. We also report on results from a blind injection challenge
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