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1 Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy Joseph Giaime, Louisiana State University “LIGO is a mechanical experiment.” Fred

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Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy. Joseph Giaime, Louisiana State University. “LIGO is a mechanical experiment.” Fred Raab. Limits to imagination. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

1

Critical mechanical technologies for future

gravitational-wave astronomy

Critical mechanical technologies for future

gravitational-wave astronomy

Joseph Giaime, Louisiana State UniversityJoseph Giaime, Louisiana State University

“LIGO is a mechanical experiment.” Fred Raab

Page 2: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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Limits to imaginationLimits to imagination•It is difficult to judge among ideas for advanced

detectors until the technology has been tried. We have guessed wrong before.

•How do we anticipate success of materials research?

‣ Can we buy 100 bits of material with particular once-demonstrated properties? When?

‣ How hard do we push with our own limited funds on the materials state of the art?

•How do we scale reliability versus complexity, in either manufacture or operation?

‣ It takes years of hard work to develop a procurement/manufacturing pipeline for complex precision mechanical, optical and electronic systems.

‣ It is ‘easy’ to sketch out a scheme with many beams and complex servo-controls, but how many engineers will it take to keep it working as a real observatory?

•When will non-linear effects bite? Excessive worry causes paralysis.

•It is difficult to judge among ideas for advanced detectors until the technology has been tried. We have guessed wrong before.

•How do we anticipate success of materials research?

‣ Can we buy 100 bits of material with particular once-demonstrated properties? When?

‣ How hard do we push with our own limited funds on the materials state of the art?

•How do we scale reliability versus complexity, in either manufacture or operation?

‣ It takes years of hard work to develop a procurement/manufacturing pipeline for complex precision mechanical, optical and electronic systems.

‣ It is ‘easy’ to sketch out a scheme with many beams and complex servo-controls, but how many engineers will it take to keep it working as a real observatory?

•When will non-linear effects bite? Excessive worry causes paralysis.

Page 3: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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S. Ballmer

Page 4: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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Design responsivenessDesign responsiveness

•A major design change or upgrade to a LIGO-like detector takes 2-10 years. e.g., HEPI, after years of work by real engineers, to 2 years to bring to LLO once we decided to push it.

•Design decisions accumulate, and are expensive to reverse once prototyping has been done.

•Adv LIGO was designed to be a ‘sure thing’ for NS/NS sources, possibly neglecting others.

•Imagine a graph of expected NS/NS rate versus year, 1985 - present...‣ Several-year period lowpass filter applied to new source predictions.

•Trade-offs:‣ complexity-driven high performance versus duty cycle.

‣ consistency of data interpretation versus continual improvements.

‣ Should our 3 detectors be alike, or different (and better)?

‣ $, £, €, ¥ versus everything.

•A major design change or upgrade to a LIGO-like detector takes 2-10 years. e.g., HEPI, after years of work by real engineers, to 2 years to bring to LLO once we decided to push it.

•Design decisions accumulate, and are expensive to reverse once prototyping has been done.

•Adv LIGO was designed to be a ‘sure thing’ for NS/NS sources, possibly neglecting others.

•Imagine a graph of expected NS/NS rate versus year, 1985 - present...‣ Several-year period lowpass filter applied to new source predictions.

•Trade-offs:‣ complexity-driven high performance versus duty cycle.

‣ consistency of data interpretation versus continual improvements.

‣ Should our 3 detectors be alike, or different (and better)?

‣ $, £, €, ¥ versus everything.

Page 5: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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What do experimenters want?

What do experimenters want?

•Theoretical contribution to data analysis widely discussed this week.

•Theory tends to produce physical source models, or simulations of existing models. Usually, this means a paper with graphs of h(f) based on a particular set of initial conditions.

•To be useful in analysis, one of the two black boxes (green ovals) would be helpful, for each class of sources under study.

•Theoretical contribution to data analysis widely discussed this week.

•Theory tends to produce physical source models, or simulations of existing models. Usually, this means a paper with graphs of h(f) based on a particular set of initial conditions.

•To be useful in analysis, one of the two black boxes (green ovals) would be helpful, for each class of sources under study.

Page 6: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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Post Adv LIGO changes, low frequency & high frequency

Post Adv LIGO changes, low frequency & high frequency

• Neutron Star & Black Hole Binaries‣ inspiral‣ merger

• Spinning NS’s‣ LMXBs‣ known pulsars‣ previously

unknown?• NS Birth (SN)

‣ tumbling‣ convection

• Stochastic background‣ big bang‣ early universe

• Neutron Star & Black Hole Binaries‣ inspiral‣ merger

• Spinning NS’s‣ LMXBs‣ known pulsars‣ previously

unknown?• NS Birth (SN)

‣ tumbling‣ convection

• Stochastic background‣ big bang‣ early universe

Theoretical source strengths (Kip Thorne)

Page 7: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

Suspension thermal noise

Internal thermal noise

Newtonian background,estimate for LIGO sites

Seismic ‘cutoff’ at 10 Hz

Unified quantum noise dominates at most frequencies for fullpower, broadband tuning

10-24

10-25

10 Hz 100 Hz 1 kHz

10-22

10-23

Initial LIGO

1 Hz

Adv LIGO Detector Performance

D. Shoemaker

Zones to improve?

Page 8: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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Push to lower frequenciesPush to lower frequencies

•Gravity gradient forces from ground motion.

•Photon pressure on mirrors.

•Control system noise.

•Gravity gradient forces from ground motion.

•Photon pressure on mirrors.

•Control system noise.

Page 9: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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Earth strain noise, Berger & Levine ’72

Earth strain noise, Berger & Levine ’72

‘stochastic’ Earth strain,without excited modes, storms, quakes, etc.

Page 10: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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Get away from surface wavesGet away from surface waves

Page 11: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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Low frequency extension 1, DeSalvo, Cella, etc.

Low frequency extension 1, DeSalvo, Cella, etc.

•Reduced laser power & finesse.

•longer TM suspension

•larger, heavier mirror, silica.

•flat-top transverse FP mode.

•MGAS seismic isolation.

•fitted subtraction of gradient noise?

•underground hollow around TM, to partially cancel GG?

•Reduced laser power & finesse.

•longer TM suspension

•larger, heavier mirror, silica.

•flat-top transverse FP mode.

•MGAS seismic isolation.

•fitted subtraction of gradient noise?

•underground hollow around TM, to partially cancel GG?

Page 12: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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Low frequency extension 2, ‘LCGT’

Low frequency extension 2, ‘LCGT’

•Kuroda’s Aspen talk...

•Underground to avoid surface noise.

•Cryogenic suspension, 4-20 K Sapphire TM & fibers.

•GAS/Inv pendulum seismic isolation.

•Extra vertical active stage above penultimate mass, using vert. FP.

•Susp-point interf.

•RSE to minimize heat on mirrors

•Kuroda’s Aspen talk...

•Underground to avoid surface noise.

•Cryogenic suspension, 4-20 K Sapphire TM & fibers.

•GAS/Inv pendulum seismic isolation.

•Extra vertical active stage above penultimate mass, using vert. FP.

•Susp-point interf.

•RSE to minimize heat on mirrors

Page 13: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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Low frequency extension 3, ‘BLITS’

Low frequency extension 3, ‘BLITS’

• From W. Johnson’s Aspen talk. Ideas credited to many, including Rowan, Hough, Whitcomb, etc.

• Extension right down to gravity gradient.

• 1.5 µm laser, 400 W

• Suspension/isolation notional design only.

• Silicon test mass, 720 kg, transparent at laser wavelength.

• Tests mass cooled to 20 K, the lower of the two temp’s when thermal expansion coef goes to zero.

• NS/NS range whimsically goes to 900 Mpc.

• 130 K ‘sweet spot’ also being looked at.

• From W. Johnson’s Aspen talk. Ideas credited to many, including Rowan, Hough, Whitcomb, etc.

• Extension right down to gravity gradient.

• 1.5 µm laser, 400 W

• Suspension/isolation notional design only.

• Silicon test mass, 720 kg, transparent at laser wavelength.

• Tests mass cooled to 20 K, the lower of the two temp’s when thermal expansion coef goes to zero.

• NS/NS range whimsically goes to 900 Mpc.

• 130 K ‘sweet spot’ also being looked at.

Page 14: Critical mechanical technologies for future gravitational-wave astronomy

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What may be neededWhat may be needed•To lower kT noise:

‣ materials research:

⁍ substrates, flexures, fibers, bonding

⁍ physical properties at cryo temperatures, in interesting geometries.

‣ coating techniques for various substrates and wavelengths.

‣ Cryogenic techniques.

‣ Charge and heat flow and control.

•To lower gravity gradient and transmitted seismic noise:‣ Work to develop seismic models that take ground measurements and

correlate with newtonian coupling to test mass.

‣ Lower-frequency seismic isolation platforms

‣ Interferometric displacement sensor development for advanced suspension damping loops.

•To lower control system noise (and add robustness):‣ Hierarchical interferometer alignment control schemes, including

⁍ independent sensors (like HEPI)

⁍ control reallocation

⁍ DSP/Data systems development, with emphases on ease of use during commissioning, and robustness.

•To lower interferometer quantum noise: ‣ pay attention to next talk.

•To lower kT noise:‣ materials research:

⁍ substrates, flexures, fibers, bonding

⁍ physical properties at cryo temperatures, in interesting geometries.

‣ coating techniques for various substrates and wavelengths.

‣ Cryogenic techniques.

‣ Charge and heat flow and control.

•To lower gravity gradient and transmitted seismic noise:‣ Work to develop seismic models that take ground measurements and

correlate with newtonian coupling to test mass.

‣ Lower-frequency seismic isolation platforms

‣ Interferometric displacement sensor development for advanced suspension damping loops.

•To lower control system noise (and add robustness):‣ Hierarchical interferometer alignment control schemes, including

⁍ independent sensors (like HEPI)

⁍ control reallocation

⁍ DSP/Data systems development, with emphases on ease of use during commissioning, and robustness.

•To lower interferometer quantum noise: ‣ pay attention to next talk.