15 research outputs found
A General Approach to Optomechanical Parametric Instabilities
We present a simple feedback description of parametric instabilities which
can be applied to a variety of optical systems. Parametric instabilities are of
particular interest to the field of gravitational-wave interferometry where
high mechanical quality factors and a large amount of stored optical power have
the potential for instability. In our use of Advanced LIGO as an example
application, we find that parametric instabilities, if left unaddressed,
present a potential threat to the stability of high-power operation
Reducing Thermal Noise in Future Gravitational Wave Detectors by employing Khalili Etalons
Reduction of thermal noise in dielectric mirror coatings is a key issue for
the sensitivity improvement in second and third generation interferometric
gravitational wave detectors. Replacing an end mirror of the interferometer by
an anti-resonant cavity (a so-called Khalili cavity) has been proposed to
realize the reduction of the overall thermal noise level. In this article we
show that the use of a Khalili etalon, which requires less hardware than a
Khalili cavity, yields still a significant reduction of thermal noise. We
identify the optimum distribution of coating layers on the front and rear
surfaces of the etalon and compare the total noise budget with a conventional
mirror. In addition we briefly discuss advantages and disadvantages of the
Khalili etalon compared with the Khalili cavity in terms of technical aspects,
such as interferometric length control and thermal lensing.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure
Analysis of parametric oscillatory instability in Fabry-Perot cavity with Gauss and Laguerre-Gauss main mode profile
We calculate the parametric instabilities in Fabry-Perot cavities of Advanced
VIRGO and LIGO interferometers with different main mode profiles. All unstable
combinations of elastic and Stokes modes both for the case with TEM00 and LG33
as a carriers are deduced.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Effect of interference on thermal noise and coating optimization in dielectric mirrors
Optical multilayer coatings of high-reflective mirrors significantly
determine the properties of Fabry-Perot resonators. Thermal (Brownian) noise in
these coatings produce excess phase noise which can seriously degrade the
sensitivity of high-precision measurements with these cavities, in particular
in laser gravitational-wave antennas (for example project LIGO), where at the
current stage it is one of the main limiting factors. We present a method to
calculate this effect accurately and analyze different strategies to diminish
it by optimizing the coating. Traditionally this noise is calculated as if the
beam is reflected from the surface of the mirror fluctuating due to the sums of
the fluctuations of each layer. However the beam in fact penetrates a coating
and Brownian expansion of the layers leads to dephasing of interference in the
coating and consequently to additional change in reflected phase. Fluctuations
in the thickness of a layer change the strain in the medium and hence due to
photoelastic effect change the refractive index of this layer. This additional
effect should be also considered. It is possible to make the noise smaller
preserving the reflectivity by changing the total number of layers and
thicknesses of high and low refractive ones. We show how this optimized coating
may be constructed analytically rather then numerically as before. We also
check the possibility to use internal resonant layers and optimized cap layer
to decrease the thermal noise.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Thermorefractive noise of finite-sized cylindrical test masses
We present an analytical solution for the effect of thermorefractive noise considering finite-sized cylindrical test masses. For crystalline materials at low temperatures, the effect of finite dimensions becomes important. The calculations are independently performed using the Fluctuation-Dissipation-Theorem and Langevin's approach. Our results are applied to the input test mass of the current and future cryogenic gravitational wave detectors CLIO, LCGT, and ET and are compared to the respective standard quantum limit. For a substrate temperature of 10 K, we find that the thermorefractive noise amplitude of the silicon input test mass in ET is only a factor of 2 below the standard quantum limit for frequencies above 500 Hz. Thus, thermorefractive noise of the input test mass could become a severe limitation if one uses techniques to beat the standard quantum limit like, e.g., squeezing. In contrast, the effect of thermorefractive noise of the input test mass is negligible for CLIO and LCGT
Reduction of coating thermal noise by using an etalon
Reduction of coating thermal noise is a key issue in precise measurements
with an optical interferometer. A good example of such a measurement device is
a gravitational-wave detector, where each mirror is coated by a few tens of
quarter-wavelength dielectric layers to achieve high reflectivity while the
thermal-noise level increases with the number of layers. One way to realize the
reduction of coating thermal noise, recently proposed by Khalili, is the
mechanical separation of the first few layers from the rest so that a major
part of the fluctuations contributes only little to the phase shift of the
reflected light. Using an etalon, a Fabry-Perot optical resonator of a
monolithic cavity, with a few coating layers on the front and significantly
more on the back surface is a way to realize such a system without too much
complexity, and in this paper we perform a thermal-noise analysis of an etalon
using the Fluctuation-dissipation theorem with probes on both sides of a
finite-size cylindrical mirror.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Sensitivity Studies for Third-Generation Gravitational Wave Observatories
Advanced gravitational wave detectors, currently under construction, are
expected to directly observe gravitational wave signals of astrophysical
origin. The Einstein Telescope, a third-generation gravitational wave detector,
has been proposed in order to fully open up the emerging field of gravitational
wave astronomy. In this article we describe sensitivity models for the Einstein
Telescope and investigate potential limits imposed by fundamental noise
sources. A special focus is set on evaluating the frequency band below 10Hz
where a complex mixture of seismic, gravity gradient, suspension thermal and
radiation pressure noise dominates. We develop the most accurate sensitivity
model, referred to as ET-D, for a third-generation detector so far, including
the most relevant fundamental noise contributions.Comment: 13 pages, 7 picture
Scientific Potential of Einstein Telescope
Einstein gravitational-wave Telescope (ET) is a design study funded by the
European Commission to explore the technological challenges of and scientific
benefits from building a third generation gravitational wave detector. The
three-year study, which concluded earlier this year, has formulated the
conceptual design of an observatory that can support the implementation of new
technology for the next two to three decades. The goal of this talk is to
introduce the audience to the overall aims and objectives of the project and to
enumerate ET's potential to influence our understanding of fundamental physics,
astrophysics and cosmology.Comment: Conforms to conference proceedings, several author names correcte
