Greg Ogin, Eric Black, Eric Gustafson, Ken Libbrecht

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Gravitational Wave Astronomy Dr. Giles Hammond Institute for Gravitational Research SUPA, University of Glasgow Universität Jena, August 2010.
Advertisements

ILIAS 5-6/11/2004 WG T2 Task T2 (WG 11) AIM: exact definition (theoretical and experimental) of photo-thermal noise PARTICIPANTS INFN (AURIGA group; also.
T1 task- update Mike Plissi. 2 Collaboration Groups actively involved INFN-VIRGO MAT IGR-Glasgow Groups that have expressed interest INFN-AURIGA CNRS-LKB.
November 29-30, 2001 LIGO-G Z Talk at PAC-11, LHO 1 Proposal Thermal and Thermoelastic Noise Research for Advanced LIGO Optics Norio Nakagawa.
Transportation of Ultra-Stable Light via Optical Fiber Emily Conant Bard College, California Institute of Technology Mentors: Evan Hall, Rana Adhikari,
Thermally Deformable Mirrors: a new Adaptive Optics scheme for Advanced Gravitational Wave Interferometers Marie Kasprzack Laboratoire de l’Accélérateur.
Thermo-elastic properties characterization by photothermal microscopy J.Jumel,F.Taillade and F.Lepoutre Eur. Phys. J. AP 23, Journal Club Presentation.
Polarization-preserving of laser beam in Fabry Perot Cavity Accelerator center, IHEP Li Xiaoping.
Thermal noise issues Chinyere Ifeoma Nwabugwu Louisiana State University August 05, 2005 Eric Black, Akira Villar, Kenneth G. Libbrecht, Kate Dooley, Royal.
Thermal Noise from Coatings Gregg Harry; Andri Gretarsson, Scott Kittelberger, Steve Penn, Peter Saulson; Marty Fejer, Eric Gustafson, Roger Route, Sheila.
LIGO-G Z TNI Progress and Status Greg Ogin LSC Meeting March 22, 2007 Eric Black, Kenneth Libbrecht, Dennis Coyne Grad students: Akira Villar,
A. Bunkowski Nano-structured Optics for GW Detectors 1 A.Bunkowski, O. Burmeister, D. Friedrich, K. Danzmann, and R. Schnabel in collaboration with T.
Thermal noise from optical coatings Gregory Harry Massachusetts Institute of Technology - on behalf of the LIGO Science Collaboration - 25 July
Absorption in bulk crystalline silicon and in the crystal surfaces Aleksandr Khalaidovski 1 Alexander Khalaidovski 1, Jessica Steinlechner 2, Roman Schnabel.
Gravitational Wave Detection Using Precision Interferometry Gregory Harry Massachusetts Institute of Technology - On Behalf of the LIGO Science Collaboration.
Absorption in bulk crystalline silicon and in the crystal surfaces Aleksandr Khalaidovski 1 Alexander Khalaidovski 1, Jessica Steinlechner 2, Roman Schnabel.
Photo-thermal Deflection Spectroscopy George Noid LIGO SURF Student.
G R Thermal Noise Interferometer Advisory Board Review Eric Black, Akira Villar, Greg Ogin, Tara Chelermsongsak, Riccardo Desalvo, and Kenneth.
G R LIGO’s Thermal Noise Interferometer Eric Black LIGO Science Seminar October 8, 2002 Ken Libbrecht, Shanti Rao (Caltech) Seiji Kawamura (TAMA)
LIGO-G Z Mirror Q’s and thermal noise in the TNI with ring dampers Akira Villar LIGO Seminar April 20, 2006 Eric D. Black, Kenneth G. Libbrecht.
G R LIGO’s Thermal Noise Interferometer: Progress and Status Eric Black LSC Meeting Review November 12, 2003 Ivan Grudinin, Akira Villar, Kenneth.
Experimental investigation of dynamic Photothermal Effect
Effect of Temperature on Coating Thermal Noise in Advanced LIGO
Coating Program Update Gregory Harry LIGO/MIT on behalf of the Coating Working Group March 22, 2006 LSC Meeting – LHO G R.
1 Kazuhiro Yamamoto Max-Planck-Institut fuer Gravitationsphysik (Albert-Einstein-Institut) Institut fuer Gravitationsphysik, Leibniz Universitaet Hannover.
Thermoelastic dissipation in inhomogeneous media: loss measurements and thermal noise in coated test masses Sheila Rowan, Marty Fejer and LSC Coating collaboration.
Janyce Franc-Kyoto-GWADW1 Simulation and research for the future ET mirrors Janyce Franc, Nazario Morgado, Raffaele Flaminio Laboratoire des Matériaux.
Sapphire for the LCGT project Eiichi Hirose ICRR, University of Tokyo Kyohei Watanabe, Norikatsu Mio PSC, University of Tokyo GT Advanced Technology, Sep.
G R LIGO’s Ultimate Astrophysical Reach Eric Black LIGO Seminar April 20, 2004 Ivan Grudinin, Akira Villar, Kenneth G. Libbrecht.
Equivalence relation between non spherical optical cavities and application to advanced G.W. interferometers. Juri Agresti and Erika D’Ambrosio Aims of.
17/05/2010A. Rocchi - GWADW Kyoto2 Thermal effects: a brief introduction  In TM, optical power predominantly absorbed by the HR coating and converted.
Progress in LIGO Coating Development Gregory Harry Massachusetts Institute of Technology - LIGO Laboratory - March 21, 2008 Coating Workshop - Caltech.
Aspen Flat Beam Profile to Depress Thermal Noise J.Agresti, R. DeSalvo LIGO-G Z.
Optics related research for interferometric gravitational wave detectors S. Rowan for the Optics working group of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration SUPA,
G R Thermal Noise Interferometer (TNI) Eric Black 8 Oct 02.
Some Ideas on Coatingless all-reflective ITF Adalberto Giazotto (*) INFN- Pisa (*) Work done in collaboration with G. Cella.
LIGO-G Z Silicon as a low thermal noise test mass material S. Rowan, R. Route, M.M. Fejer, R.L. Byer Stanford University P. Sneddon, D. Crooks,
Heinert et al Properties of candidate materials for cryogenic mirrors 1 Properties of candidate materials for cryogenic mirrors D. Heinert,
LIGO-G Z LIGO’s Thermal Noise Interferometer Progress and Status Eric D. Black, Kenneth G. Libbrecht, and Shanti Rao (Caltech) Seiji Kawamura.
Estimating thermo-optic noise from AdLIGO coatings Embry-Riddle Andri M. Gretarsson DCC#: G Z.
Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena Institute of Solid State Physics – Low Temperature Physics Christian Schwarz 15 th September Genoa 1 Investigation.
1 Opto-Acoustic Imaging 台大電機系李百祺. 2 Conventional Ultrasonic Imaging Spatial resolution is mainly determined by frequency. Fabrication of high frequency.
Metallurgha.ir1. Lecture 5 Advanced Topics II Signal, Noise and Bandwidth. Fundamental Limitations of force measurement metallurgha.ir2.
FDTD Simulation of Diffraction Grating Displacement Noise 1 Daniel Brown University of Birmingham AEI, Hanover - 14/12/2010.
Ab Initio Property Prediction with Density Functional Theory (DFT) Relevant to Coating Thermal Noise Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory.
PHYS 408 Applied Optics (Lecture 8)
Deep Chatterjee IISER Kolkata Mentors: Koji Arai; Matthew Abernathy
Interferometer configurations for Gravitational Wave Detectors
Peter Beyersdorf TAMA300 Results from the Stanford 10m all-reflective polarization Sagnac interferometer Peter Beyersdorf TAMA300.
Mingyun Li & Kevin Lehmann Department of Chemistry and Physics
Mechanical Loss in Silica substrates
Studies of some properties of Hydroxide-Catalysis Bonds
with Results from Mixture Theory
Thermal noise calculations for cryogenic optics
Synopsis by Maria Ruiz-Gonzalez 12/8/16
Mirror thermal noises and its implications on the mirror design
L. Glover(1,3), R. DeSalvo(1,3), B. Kells(2), I. Pinto(3)
Nergis Mavalvala Aspen January 2005
S. Rowan, M. Fejer, E. Gustafson, R. Route, G. Zeltzer
Thermal noise reduction through LG modes
Determining the Index of Refraction of AlF3
Overview of Advanced LIGO Coating Status
New Results on Photothermal Effect: Size and Coating Effect
Direct Broadband Measurement of Advanced Coating Noise
Flat-Top Beam Profile Cavity Prototype: design and preliminary tests
Modeling of Advanced LIGO with Melody
Thermal Noise Interferometer Update and Status
Flat-Top Beam Profile Cavity Prototype
Advanced Optical Sensing
Sensitivity curves beyond the Advanced detectors
Presentation transcript:

Direct Measurement of Thermo-Optic Coefficients in Coatings by Photothermal Spectroscopy Greg Ogin, Eric Black, Eric Gustafson, Ken Libbrecht Matt Abernathy Presenting LSC/VIRGO Conference, Rome, Italy, 10 September 2012 LIGO-G1200935

The AdLIGO Noise Curve Source: Evans et al, LIGO-P080071-00

Thermo-optic Noise: TO = TE + TR Thermo-Elastic (TE): Mirror’s surface expands into probe beam. By convention, negative dφ/dT Measuring phase from a reference plane

Thermo-optic Noise: TO = TE + TR Thermo-Refractive (TR): Coating layers deviate from λ/4 condition – due to both physical expansion and change in index of refraction. To first order, this manifests as a change in the phase of the reflected beam. E+ Quarter-wave stack: E- E+ After expansion, index change: E-

Photothermal Apparatus NPRO Vacuum Chamber λ/2 CO2 Beam Dump PBS Test Mirror AOM λ/2 PZT Beam Dump Data Acquisition Electronics Fringe Locking Electronics

Mirror Under Test

Expected Signal: Canonical Form Substrate CTE

Expected Signal: Canonical Form Coating properties (including coating CTE effects) Substrate CTE

Sapphire Substrate Response Magnitude

Sapphire Substrate Response Phase

Silica Substrate Response Magnitude

Silica Substrate Response Magnitude +/- 20%

Recent Results: Silica Substrate

Combined TE/TR Results QWL Bragg

Gold coatings for pure TE measurements Challenge: 80% CO2 absorption drops down to 0.5% CO2 absorption.

Much lower SNR 10-11 10-12 Displacement (m) This is 14 consecutive sweeps of the same mirror with no re-adjustment. We see Noisy noise Systematic noise

Gold Coated “TE alone” Results QWL Bragg

Extracting Values For quarter-wavelength coatings For 1/8-3/8 coatings For quarter-wavelength TE only For 1/8-3/8 coatings TE only (Cr? Chromium.)

The Measurement Matrix Which we invert to get…

The Parameter Estimation Matrix

Our Results…

Our Measurements of α (5.5 ± 1.2)x10-6 K-1 (8.9 ± 1.8)x10-6 K-1 SiO2 – Low Index 2.1x10-6 K-1 Cetinorgu et al, Applied Optics 48, 4536 (2009) 5.1x10-7 K-1 Crooks et al, CQG (2004) 5.5x10-7 K-1 Braginsky et al, Phys Lett A 312, 244 (2003) Ta2O5 – High Index + 4.4x10-6 K-1 Cetinorgu et al, Applied Optics 48, 4536 (2009) + 3.6x10-6 K-1 Crooks et al, CQG (2004) - 4.4x10-5 K-1 MN Inci, J Phys D 37, 3151 (2004) + 5x10-6 K-1 Braginsky et al, arXiv: gr-qc/0304100v1 (2003) (5.5 ± 1.2)x10-6 K-1 (8.9 ± 1.8)x10-6 K-1

Our Measurements of β (1.9 ± 8.0)x10-6 K-1 (1.2 ± 0.4)x10-4 K-1 SiO2 – Low Index 8x10-6 K-1 GWINC v2 (“Braginsky”) Ta2O5 – High Index 1.21x10-4 K-1 MN Inci, J Phys D 37, 3151 (2004) 6x10-5 K-1 * Gretarsson, LIGO-G080151-00-Z (2008) *Assumes α (1.9 ± 8.0)x10-6 K-1 (1.2 ± 0.4)x10-4 K-1

AdLIGO Baseline (GWINC v3)

AdLIGO with Our Parameters Disclaimer: This Is Not an AdLIGO Prediction Why so much higher? -Mainly increased alpha for fused silica -Twice the number of layers means bigger effect, and “only slightly” larger dndT means can’t count on cancellation

Conclusions Measuring these parameters is non-trivial, but we have demonstrated a technique, and reported initial results We have the ability to measure exactly what AdLIGO needs Thermo-optic noise, and these parameters in particular, could be critical and need further study for future generations of gravitational wave detectors

Future Directions Characterize and reduce systematic errors Perform measurements on AdLIGO coatings with Cr layers (or at the very least Ion Beam Sputtered coatings and Ti:Ta2O5 coatings) Look at measurements of other materials and geometries

Acknowledgements Greg Ogin Ken Libbrecht, Eric Black Eric Gustafson Caltech LIGO-X, Akira Villar Family and friends LIGO and the NSF Award PHY-0757058

Questions?

Supplimentary Slides follow

Measuring α: Cavity Assisted Photothermal Spectroscopy Probe locked to cavity Pump derived from probe laser chopped to cyclically heat cavity end mirror Sensitivity to mirror expansion proportional to Finesse Heating power in cavity proportional to Finesse Sample coated with gold to enhance absorption Black et al, J Appl Phys 95, 7655 (2004)

Details of the two terms: Thermo-Elastic: Thermo-Refractive: Negative phase Positive phase Evans et al, Physical Review D 78, 102003 (2008)

Theory: Assumptions The scale of periodic thermal disturbances (a “thermal wavelength”) is much smaller than our heating spot The coating thickness is smaller than a thermal wavelength Together, these give us a 1-D problem where the thermal dynamics are all determined by the properties of the substrate.

Theory: Heat Equation Solutions The heat equation becomes With solutions

Theory: Boundary Condition Our boundary condition gives C(ω)

Expected Signal - A Coherent Sum of…

Expected Signal: Canonical Form

(Reminder) Negative phase Positive phase Thermo-Elastic: Thermo-Refractive: Negative phase Positive phase Evans et al, Physical Review D 78, 102003 (2008)

Expected Signal: Canonical Form

Expected Signal: Canonical Form

Expected Signal: Canonical Form

Expected Signal: Canonical Form

Recent Results: Sapphire Substrate Response Magnitude

Recent Results: Sapphire Substrate Response Phase

Recent Results: Sapphire Substrate Response Phase Wait, what?! ?

Sapphire: Long Thermal Wavelength really means we have a 3-D problem (axially symmetric), “plane thermal waves” don’t work

“Cerdonio”-type solution Green’s function on the surface of a half-space Forced sinusoidally with a Gaussian profiled beam

Then all you have to do is… Integrate and again.

Thanks Mathematica

Thanks Mathematica