Designs for future gravitational wave detection facilities feature silicon test masses at cryogenic temperatures to reduce thermal noise and thermally induced aberrations. Designers call for ...operation at 123 K or close to 18 K to exploit the vanishing thermal expansion of crystalline silicon. The amount of absorbed heat that can be radiatively removed from the test masses is limited at these temperatures, forcing complex cooling scenarios to be considered, including conduction through suspension wires. This is particularly relevant for the kilohertz class of detectors that aim for extremely high circulating power, i.e., roughly a factor 20 more than the world record at the time of writing, to reduce quantum noise. We explore the impact of raising the test mass temperature and show that a dedicated kilohertz-band cryogenic instrument can do so without significant sensitivity penalty, thereby boosting the radiative cooling rate and allowing higher power operation with simpler suspensions. We also explore the implications of operating cryogenic broadband detectors at elevated temperatures. The work presented here was instrumental in the development of the Neutron Star Extreme Matter Observatory kilohertz-band gravitational wave detector design concept.
The new generation of gravitational waves detectors require unprecedented levels of isolation from seismic noise. This article reviews the seismic isolation strategy and instrumentation developed for ...the Advanced LIGO observatories. It summarizes over a decade of research on active inertial isolation and shows the performance recently achieved at the Advanced LIGO observatories. The paper emphasizes the scientific and technical challenges of this endeavor and how they have been addressed. An overview of the isolation strategy is given. It combines multiple layers of passive and active inertial isolation to provide suitable rejection of seismic noise at all frequencies. A detailed presentation of the three active platforms that have been developed is given. They are the hydraulic pre-isolator, the single-stage internal isolator and the two-stage internal isolator. The architecture, instrumentation, control scheme and isolation results are presented for each of the three systems. Results show that the seismic isolation sub-system meets Advanced LIGO's stringent requirements and robustly supports the operation of the two detectors.
Shorter-than-excitation-wavelength (STEW) optical emissions, where photons originating in a material have higher energies than those that created them, have in the past few decades become important ...in science and medicine, with applications ranging from improving the efficiency of solar cells to creating new lasers and performing background-free microscopy of biological samples. Assigning and predicting the origin of STEW emissions is critical for accelerating development and applications of new processes and materials. In this review, we examine the different processes underlying STEW emissions and outline pathways to identify them using readily available experimental techniques.
The two-stage vibration isolation and positioning platform provides passive and active isolation in all directions and translation. It uses a unique combination of position sensors, geophones and ...broadband seismometers to provide unprecedented levels of isolation.
•The paper presents the two-stage vibration isolation and positioning platform used in Advanced LIGO gravitational waves detectors.•The system can support a 1000kg of sensitive equipment and operate in ultra-high vacuum.•Each of the two stages provide passive and active isolation in all directions of translation and rotation (12 axis).•The active control strategy uses a unique combination of relative sensors, geophones and broadband seismometers.•The system reduces the motion to the level of 10−11 m/Hz at 1Hz and 10−12 m/Hz at 10Hz.
New generations of gravity wave detectors require unprecedented levels of vibration isolation. This paper presents the final design of the vibration isolation and positioning platform used in Advanced LIGO to support the interferometer's core optics. This five-ton two-and-half-m wide system operating in ultra-high vacuum. It features two stages of isolation mounted in series. The stages are imbricated to reduce the overall height. Each stage provides isolation in all directions of translation and rotation. The system is instrumented with a unique combination of low noise relative and inertial sensors. The active control provides isolation from 0.1Hz to 30Hz. It brings the platform motion down to 10−11 m/Hz at 1Hz. Active and passive isolation combine to bring the platform motion below 10−12 m/Hz at 10Hz. The passive isolation lowers the motion below 10−13 m/Hz at 100Hz. The paper describes how the platform has been engineered not only to meet the isolation requirements, but also to permit the construction, testing, and commissioning process of the fifteen units needed for Advanced LIGO observatories.
We describe an efficient Er:YAG laser that is resonantly pumped using continuous-wave (CW) laser diodes at 1470 nm. For CW lasing, it emits 6.1 W at 1645 nm with a slope efficiency of 36%, the ...highest efficiency reported for an Er:YAG laser that is pumped in this manner. In Q-switched operation, the laser produces diffraction-limited pulses with an average power of 2.5 W at 2 kHz PRF. To our knowledge this is the first Q-switched Er:YAG laser resonantly pumped by CW laser diodes.
The two-stage vibration isolation and positioning platform (BSC-ISI) provides three orders of magnitude of isolation at all frequencies above 1Hz.
•The paper presents near a decade of research on the ...two-stage twelve-axis vibration isolation platforms developed for Advanced LIGO.•This system positions and isolates 1000kg of very sensitive equipment in all directions of translation and rotation.•The system provides more than three orders of magnitude of isolation over a very large bandwidth.•We show how results from the prototyping phases have been used for the production and commissioning of 15 units.•Isolation results show that the system brings the motion below 10−11m/Hz at 1Hz and 10−12 m/Hz at 10Hz.
This paper presents the results of the past seven years of experimental investigation and testing done on the two-stage twelve-axis vibration isolation platform for Advanced LIGO gravity waves observatories. This five-ton two-and-half-meter wide system supports more than a 1000kg of very sensitive equipment. It provides positioning capability and seismic isolation in all directions of translation and rotation. To meet the very stringent requirements of Advanced LIGO, the system must provide more than three orders of magnitude of isolation over a very large bandwidth. It must bring the motion below 10−11 m/Hz at 1Hz and 10−12 m/Hz at 10Hz. A prototype of this system has been built in 2006. It has been extensively tested and analyzed during the following two years. This paper shows how the experimental results obtained with the prototype were used to engineer the final design. It highlights how the engineering solutions implemented not only improved the isolation performance but also greatly simplified the assembly, testing, and commissioning process. During the past two years, five units have been constructed, tested, installed and commissioned at each of the two LIGO observatories. Five other units are being built for an upcoming third observatory. The test results presented show that the system meets the motion requirements, and reach the sensor noise in the control bandwidth.
The hydraulic external pre-isolator (HEPI) is the first six degrees of freedom active seismic isolation system implemented at the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (LIGO). ...Implementation was first completed at the LIGO Livingston Observatory (LLO) prior to LIGOʼs fifth science run7, successfully cutting down the disturbance seen by LLOʼs suspended optics in the two most prominent seismic disturbance bands, the microseism (0.1-0.3 Hz) and the anthropogenic (1-3 Hz) bands, by a factor of a few to tens. The improvement in seismic isolation contributed directly to LLOʼs much improved duty cycle of 66.7% and LIGOʼs triple coincident duty cycle of 53%. We report the design, control scheme, and isolation performance of HEPI at LLO in this paper. Aided by this success, funding for incorporating HEPI into the LIGO Hanford Observatory was approved and installation is currently underway.