Title: Status Report
1Status Report
- VIRGO Collaboration
- (Stefano Braccini, INFN Pisa)
2VIRGO
- LAPP Annecy
- INFN Firenze-Urbino
- INFN Frascati
- IPN Lyon
- INFN Napoli
- OCA Nice
- LAL Orsay
- ESPCI Paris
- INFN Perugia
- INFN Pisa
- INFN Roma
VIRGO at EGO Site
3VIRGO Optical Scheme
Input Mode Cleaner (144 m)
3 km long Fabry-Perot Cavities
Laser 20 W
Power Recycling
Output Mode Cleaner (4 cm)
4Injection System
Laser Cavity
Laser Source 20 W NdYVO4 laser (l1.064 mm)
5Injection System
6Mirrors
- High quality fused silica mirrors
- 35 cm diameter, 10 cm thickness, 21 kg mass
- Substrate losses 1 ppm
- Coating losses lt5 ppm
- Surface deformation l/100
7Detection
Photodiodes on Detection Bench
Output Mode Cleaner on Suspended Bench
Output Mode-Cleaner
Beam
8Mirror Suspensions
9Mirror Suspension Control
10Interferometer Locking
0.5 mm/s
MIRROR SWING
11Summary
12After Locking
13ITF Common Mode
Input Mode Cleaner
Stabilize the Laser Frequency on the ITF Common
Mode
14The VIRGO Commissioning
Phase A Commissioning of interferometer arms
Locking achieved on Autumn 2003
15The VIRGO Commissioning
Phase A Commissioning of interferometer arms
Locking achieved on Autumn 2003
16The VIRGO Commissioning
Phase B Commissioning of Recombined ITF
Locking achieved on February 2004
17The VIRGO Commissioning
Phase C Commissioning of Recycled ITF
Locking achieved on October 2004 (see Barsottis
talk)
18VIRGO Sensitivity
19Noise Hunting
Measure the sensitivity ? Identify the noise
sources ? Try to reduce the noise
20A stability problem The Jumps
Power in Recycling Cavity
The interferometer jumps in another meta-stable
state
Appeared after C5 (Retuning)
21A stability problem The Jumps
Induced by mirror misalignments and/or changes
in the photodiode demodulation phases
Recycling Cavity jumps in a different equilibrium
state because of spurious zeros in the error
signal
22Other Problems
Laser Frequency Noise (After Mode Cleaner)
Power Recycling Mirror Misaligned
Hz
Power Recycling Mirror Aligned
Time
Suppress back-scattered light
23Other Problems
Curved Recycling Mirror
Incident Beam
12 cm
24Other Problems
Incident Beam
35 cm
25Next Improvements
Injection Bench Replacement (September 2005)
Power Recycling Mirror Replacement (October 2005)
Close Automatic Alignment (see Mantovanis talk)
Next Run (August 2005)
26VIRGO Data Analysis
Six working groups settled up inside Virgo since
1998
h Reconstruction chair F.Marion (LAPP,
Annecy) Noise analysis data quality chair
J.Y.Vinet (OCA, Nice) Coalescing binaries chair
A.Vicerè (INFN Florence/Urbino) Bursts chair
P.Hello (LAL, Orsay) Periodic sources chair
S.Frasca (INFN Rome) Stochastic background chair
G.Cella (INFN Pisa)
Data Exchange
27Conclusions
28(No Transcript)
29THE END
30Vacuum
- Requirements
- 10-9 mbar for H2
- 10-14 mbar for hydrocarbons
- Vacuum pipe
- 1.2 m diameter
- Baked at 150 C for 1 week or more
31Virgo inside the Central Building
32Laser
- 20 W, NdYVO4 laser, two pumping diodes
- Injection locked to a 0.7 W NdYAG laser
- Required power stability dP/P10-8 Hz-1/2
- Required frequency stability 10-6 Hz1/2
33Input Mode Cleaner
- Mode cleaner cavity filters laser noise, select
TEM00 mode
Input mode-cleaner curved mirror
Input mode-cleaner dihedron
34Mirrors
- High quality fused silica mirrors
- 35 cm diameter, 10 cm thickness, 21 kg mass
- Figures
- Substrate losses 1 ppm
- Coating losses lt5 ppm
- Surface deformation l/100
35Output Optics
- Light filtering output mode cleaner, 3.6 cm long
monolithic cavity - Light detection InGaAs photodiodes, 3 mm
diameter, 90 quantum efficiency - Suppression of TEM01 by a factor of 10
- Length control via temperature (Peltier cell)
Detection bench
Output Mode-Cleaner
36Superattenuators
- Inverted pendulum pre-isolation stage
- Cantilever bladesmagnetic antisprings for
vertical isolation - 3 actuation points for hierarchical control of
the mirror inverted pendulum, marionette, recoil
mass - First and only attempt to extend the sensitivity
bandwidth down to a few Hz
Magnetic antisprings
Blade springs
37Passive Isolation performance
- Expected seismic displacement of the mirror (red
curve) compared with natural seismic noise - Thermal noise is dominant above 3 Hz
- Isolation sufficient also for advanced
interferometers - Active damping of the resonances at the top stage
level
38ITF Operation Conditions
- Keep the FP cavities in resonance
- Maximize the phase response
- Keep the PR cavity in resonance
- Minimize the shot noise
- Keep the output on the dark fringe
- Reduce the dependence on power fluctuations
39Interferometer control
- Quadrant photodiodes provide the error signals to
control the angular positions of the mirrors
40Hierarchical Control
- Limited dynamic range requires to split forces
over more control stages
41Towards the Target sensitivity
- Start of full VIRGO commissioning July 2003
- One cavity locked autumn 2003
- Recombined ITF locked Feb 2004
- Power recycling locked Oct 2004
42Understanding the detector
- Measure the sensitivity ? identify the noise
sources ? try to reduce the noise
43Expanding the Accessible Universe
Where and how can we reduce the detector noise?
No further suppression
- New materials
- Cryogenic interferometers
- High power laser
- Better optics
- QND techniques
44Advanced LIGO (2009)
- Higher power laser (10 W?180 W)
- New seismic isolation system (active)
- Fused silica suspension wires
- 40 kg sapphire mirrors
- Signal recycling
NS/NS detectable _at_300 Mpc
from LIGO
Virgo/LIGO range
LIGO figures
Adv. LIGO range
by R.Powell
45Advanced Virgo
- Virgo already has advanced vibration isolator
feasible with minor changes to the current
detector - New low dissipation suspension fibers and mirrors
to reduce thermal noise - New laser and optics to reduce shot noise
- Possible use of a new optical configuration
(signal recycling) - Also GEO600 and TAMA are thinking about 2nd
generation detector
46Before SSFS
200 Hz
ITF (common mode)
Gc
50 Hz
RFC
MC
B2
300 kHz
ML electronics
47SSFS without RFC
200 Hz
ITF (common mode)
RFC
MC
B2
300 kHz
17 kHz
ML electronics
SSFS electronics
48SSFS with RFC
2 Hz
Gc
200 Hz
ITF (common mode)
RFC
MC
B2
300 kHz
17 kHz
ML electronics
SSFS electronics
49Automatic alignment principle
- Anderson technique
- - Modulation frequency coincident with cavity
TEM01 mode ( 6.27 MHz) - - Two quadrants looking at the cavity
transmission (at two different Guoy phases) - - Four signals to control the 2x2 mirror angular
positions (NI NE)
50Automatic alignment results
- Automatic alignment operated on both arms
- - bandwidth 3 Hz
- - control precision 100 nrad rms
- Automatic alignment allows to
- - switch completely OFF local position controls
on all four cavity mirrors - stabilize power stored in the cavity
- increase locking duration
51- C1 (November 14-17, 2003) North arm Fabry-Perot
- C2 (February 20-23, 2004) North arm Fabry-Perot
with automatic alignment West arm Fabry-Perot - C3 (April 23-27, 2004) North cavity locked with
Second Stage Frequency Stabilization and
Automatic Alignment - C4 (June 24-29, 2004) ITF in recombined mode
with Suspension Tidal Control and Automatic
Alignment on both arms, Second Stage Frequency
Stabilization active and arms common mode locked
to the Reference Cavity. - C5 (December 2-7, 2004) ITF in recombined and
recycled mode.
52_at_ 4.1 Hz lt 6 10e-8
53(No Transcript)
54Digital Camera reads the mirror position in all
degrees of freedom
55Coil-Magnet Actuators
ADC
56(No Transcript)