534 research outputs found
Resonant speed meter for gravitational wave detection
Gravitational-wave detectors have been well developed and operated with high
sensitivity. However, they still suffer from mirror displacement noise. In this
paper, we propose a resonant speed meter, as a displacement noise-canceled
configuration based on a ring-shaped synchronous recycling interferometer. The
remarkable feature of this interferometer is that, at certain frequencies,
gravitational-wave signals are amplified, while displacement noises are not.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Suspensions Thermal Noise in the LIGO Gravitational Wave Detector
We present a calculation of the maximum sensitivity achievable by the LIGO
Gravitational wave detector in construction, due to limiting thermal noise of
its suspensions. We present a method to calculate thermal noise that allows the
prediction of the suspension thermal noise in all its 6 degrees of freedom,
from the energy dissipation due to the elasticity of the suspension wires. We
show how this approach encompasses and explains previous ways to approximate
the thermal noise limit in gravitational waver detectors. We show how this
approach can be extended to more complicated suspensions to be used in future
LIGO detectors.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figure
High-sensitivity tool for studying phonon related mechanical losses in low loss materials
Fundamental mechanical loss mechanisms exist even in very pure materials, for
instance, due to the interactions of excited acoustic waves with thermal
phonons. A reduction of these losses in a certain frequency range is desired in
high precision instruments like gravitational wave detectors. Systematic
analyses of the mechanical losses in those low loss materials are essential for
this aim, performed in a highly sensitive experimental set-up. Our novel method
of mechanical spectroscopy, cryogenic resonant acoustic spectroscopy of bulk
materials (CRA spectroscopy), is well suited to systematically determine losses
at the resonant frequencies of the samples of less than 10^(-9) in the wide
temperature range from 5 to 300 K. A high precision set-up in a specially built
cryostat allows contactless excitation and readout of the oscillations of the
sample. The experimental set-up and measuring procedure are described.
Limitations to our experiment due to external loss mechanisms are analysed. The
influence of the suspension system as well as the sample preparation is
explained.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, proceedings of PHONONS07, submitted to Journal of
Physics: Conference Serie
Gravitational radiation observations on the moon
A Laser‐Interferometer Gravitational‐Wave Observatory (LIGO) is planned for operation in the United States, with two antennas separated by several thousand kilometers. Each antenna would incorporate laser interferometers with 4 km arm lengths, operating in vacuum. The frequency range covered initially would be from a few tens of Hz to a few kHz, with possible extension to lower frequencies later. Similar systems are likely to be constructed in Europe, and there is a possibility of at least one system in Asia or Australia. It will be possible to determine the direction to a gravitational wave source by measuring the difference in the arrival times at the various antennas for burst signals or the phase difference for short duration nearly periodic signals. The addition of an antenna on the Moon, operating in support of the Earth‐based antennas, would improve the angular resolution for burst signals by about a factor 50 in the plane containing the source, the Moon, and the Earth. This would be of major importance in studies of gravitational wave sources. There is also a possibility of somewhat lower noise at frequencies near 1 Hz for a lunar gravitational wave antenna, because of lower gravity gradient noise and microseismic noise on the Moon. However, for frequencies near 0.1 Hz and below, a 10^7 km laser gravitational wave antenna in solar orbit would be much more sensitive
Upper Limit on Gravitational Wave Backgrounds at 0.2 Hz with Torsion-bar Antenna
We present the first upper limit on gravitational wave (GW) backgrounds at an
unexplored frequency of 0.2 Hz using a torsion-bar antenna (TOBA). A TOBA was
proposed to search for low-frequency GWs. We have developed a small-scaled TOBA
and successfully found {\Omega}gw(f) < 4.3 \times 1017 at 0.2 Hz as
demonstration of the TOBA's capabilities, where {\Omega}gw (f) is the GW energy
density per logarithmic frequency interval in units of the closure density. Our
result is the first nonintegrated limit to bridge the gap between the LIGO band
(around 100 Hz) and the Cassini band (10-6 - 10-4 Hz).Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Thermal noise of folding mirrors
Current gravitational wave detectors rely on the use of Michelson interferometers. One crucial limitation of their sensitivity is the thermal noise of their optical components. Thus, for example fluctuational deformations of the mirror surface are probed by a laser beam being reflected from the mirrors at normal incidence. Thermal noise models are well evolved for that case but mainly restricted to single reflections. In this work we present the effect of two consecutive reflections under a non-normal incidence onto mirror thermal noise. This situation is inherent to detectors using a geometrical folding scheme such as GEO\,600. We revise in detail the conventional direct noise analysis scheme to the situation of non-normal incidence allowing for a modified weighting funtion of mirror fluctuations. An application of these results to the GEO\,600 folding mirror for Brownian, thermoelastic and thermorefractive noise yields an increase of displacement noise amplitude by 20\% for most noise processes. The amplitude of thermoelastic substrate noise is increased by a factor 4 due to the modified weighting function. Thus the consideration of the correct weighting scheme can drastically alter the noise predictions and demands special care in any thermal noise design process
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