25
Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment Micah Koller Carleton College INT REU Program 2011 University of Washington Eöt-Wash Lab

Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment

  • Upload
    doctor

  • View
    39

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment. Micah Koller Carleton College INT REU Program 2011 University of Washington Eöt -Wash Lab. E öt -Wash Experiments. Test classical theories of gravity Newtonian (inverse square law) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment

Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment

Micah KollerCarleton College

INT REU Program 2011University of Washington

Eöt-Wash Lab

Page 2: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment

Eöt-Wash Experiments

• Test classical theories of gravity– Newtonian (inverse square law)– General Relativity (Equivalence Principle)

F = m a F = G m M / r2

• Torsion Pendulum experiments– Extremely sensitive to any mass-coupled force– Most precise limits achieved on possible new

forces over a wide range of interaction distances

Page 3: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 4: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 5: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 6: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 7: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 8: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 9: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 10: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 11: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment

The Cryogenic Torsion Pendulum

Page 12: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 13: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment

Electronic Tilt Sensor

Source: Applied Geomechanics (http://www.carboceramics.com/appliedgeomechanics/)

Page 14: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment

Challenges• Signal drift and calibration– Zero-point drift– Gain drift

• Identify repeatable noise sources• Reduce non-repeatable noise• Long-term stability and reliability• Integration into existing experiment

Page 15: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment

A Prototype

Page 16: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 17: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 18: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 19: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 20: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 21: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 22: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment

In the future . . .

• Implement a precision rotary encoder• Identify characteristic bearing rotation noise

at even lower frequencies• Study long-term repeatability of piezoelectric

actuator– Separate displacement and tilt measurements?

• Redesign prototype and integrate into existing experiment

Page 23: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment
Page 24: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment

Thanks!

Page 25: Development of a Precision Tilt Sensor for a Cryogenic Torsion Balance Experiment