2,225 research outputs found
Compensation for thermal effects in mirrors of Gravitational Wave Interferometers
In this paper we study several means of compensating for thermal lensing
which, otherwise, should be a source of concern for future upgrades of
interferometric detectors of gravitational waves. The methods we develop are
based on the principle of heating the cold parts of the mirrors. We find that
thermal compensation can help a lot but can not do miracles. It seems finally
that the best strategy for future upgrades (``advanced configurations'') is
maybe to use thermal compensation together with another substrate materials
than Silica, for example Sapphire.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figure
Virgo and the quest for gravitational waves
In the past ten years,several giant interferometers have been built around the world with the goal ofa first direct detection ofgravitational waves.The most sensitive detectors,2 interferometers for the US LIGO collaboration and the detector built by the Italo-French collaboration Virgo (fig.1) are approaching their design sensitivity. Scientific exploitation ofthese instruments is now starting ..
Radiation Pressure Induced Instabilities in Laser Interferometric Detectors of Gravitational Waves
The large scale interferometric gravitational wave detectors consist of
Fabry-Perot cavities operating at very high powers ranging from tens of kW to
MW for next generations. The high powers may result in several nonlinear
effects which would affect the performance of the detector. In this paper, we
investigate the effects of radiation pressure, which tend to displace the
mirrors from their resonant position resulting in the detuning of the cavity.
We observe a remarkable effect, namely, that the freely hanging mirrors gain
energy continuously and swing with increasing amplitude. It is found that the
`time delay', that is, the time taken for the field to adjust to its
instantaneous equilibrium value, when the mirrors are in motion, is responsible
for this effect. This effect is likely to be important in the optimal operation
of the full-scale interferometers such as VIRGO and LIGO.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures, RevTex styl
Detection of gravitational wave bursts by interferometric detectors
We study in this paper some filters for the detection of burst-like signals
in the data of interferometric gravitational-wave detectors. We present first
two general (non-linear) filters with no {\it a priori} assumption on the
waveforms to detect. A third filter, a peak correlator, is also introduced and
permits to estimate the gain, when some prior information is known about the
waveforms. We use the catalogue of supernova gravitational-wave signals built
by Zwerger and M\"uller in order to have a benchmark of the performance of each
filter and to compare to the performance of the optimal filter. The three
filters could be a part of an on-line triggering in interferometric
gravitational-wave detectors, specialised in the selection of burst events.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
A high accuracy method for the simulation of non-ideal optical cavities
We present an algorithm able to represent with a high accuracy any kind of stable cavity, even when many static or dynamical defects are present, like misalignments, curvature errors, surface irregularities, substrate inhomogeneities... We first present the theory, giving ideas on its validity domain, and a discussion of its accuracy in terms of a RMS phase error, which is found to be negligible compared to the phase noise due to roughness of optical surfaces. Then we show that the well-known features of ideal resonant cavities are found by the algorithm with a good accuracy. This tool can help for designing laser cavities, mode cleaners, or passive Fabry-Perot standards ; as an example, some results are presented concerning the design of a very long cavity planned for interferometric purposes
Compensation of Strong Thermal Lensing in High Optical Power Cavities
In an experiment to simulate the conditions in high optical power advanced
gravitational wave detectors such as Advanced LIGO, we show that strong thermal
lenses form in accordance with predictions and that they can be compensated
using an intra-cavity compensation plate heated on its cylindrical surface. We
show that high finesse ~1400 can be achieved in cavities with internal
compensation plates, and that the cavity mode structure can be maintained by
thermal compensation. It is also shown that the measurements allow a direct
measurement of substrate optical absorption in the test mass and the
compensation plate.Comment: 8 page
Structures et linéations magnétiques dans le coin Nord-Ouest du bassin Nord-fidjien : résultats préliminaires de la campagne Eva 14 (août 1987)
About the detection of gravitational wave bursts
Several filtering methods for the detection of gravitational wave bursts in
interferometric detectors are presented. These are simple and fast methods
which can act as online triggers. All methods are compared to matched filtering
with the help of a figure of merit based on the detection of supernovae signals
simulated by Zwerger and Muller.Comment: 5 pages, proceedings of GWDAW99 (Roma, Dec. 1999), to appear in Int.
J. Mod. Phys.
A First Comparison Between LIGO and Virgo Inspiral Search Pipelines
This article reports on a project that is the first step the LIGO Scientific
Collaboration and the Virgo Collaboration have taken to prepare for the mutual
search for inspiral signals. The project involved comparing the analysis
pipelines of the two collaborations on data sets prepared by both sides,
containing simulated noise and injected events. The ability of the pipelines to
detect the injected events was checked, and a first comparison of how the
parameters of the events were recovered has been completed.Comment: GWDAW-9 proceeding
A first comparison of search methods for gravitational wave bursts using LIGO and Virgo simulated data
We present a comparative study of 6 search methods for gravitational wave
bursts using simulated LIGO and Virgo noise data. The data's spectra were
chosen to follow the design sensitivity of the two 4km LIGO interferometers and
the 3km Virgo interferometer. The searches were applied on replicas of the data
sets to which 8 different signals were injected. Three figures of merit were
employed in this analysis: (a) Receiver Operator Characteristic curves, (b)
necessary signal to noise ratios for the searches to achieve 50 percent and 90
percent efficiencies, and (c) variance and bias for the estimation of the
arrival time of a gravitational wave burst.Comment: GWDAW9 proceeding
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