Finite Mirror Effects in Advanced Interferometric Gravitational Wave Detectors
Andrew P. Lundgren, Ruxandra Bondarescu, David Tsang, Mihai Bondarescu

TL;DR
This paper analyzes hyperboloidal beam shapes for advanced gravitational wave detectors, optimizing mirror configurations to minimize thermal noise and diffraction loss, and introduces methods to account for finite mirror effects.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of hyperboloidal beams, develops a code for direct diffraction loss computation, and proposes an iterative mirror reconstruction method to reduce thermal noise.
Findings
Hyperboloidal beams become Gaussian at infinite beam width.
Optimal beam parameters balance diffraction loss and thermal noise.
Mirror reconstruction can significantly reduce coating thermal noise.
Abstract
Thermal noise is expected to be the dominant source of noise in the most sensitive frequency band of second generation ground based gravitational wave detectors. Reshaping the beam to a flatter wider profile which probes more of the mirror surface reduces this noise. The "Mesa" beam shape has been proposed for this purpose and was subsequently generalized to a family of hyperboloidal beams with two parameters: twist angle alpha and beam width D. Varying alpha allows a continuous transition from the nearly-flat to the nearly-concentric Mesa beam configurations. We analytically prove that in the limit of infinite D hyperboloidal beams become Gaussians. The Advanced LIGO diffraction loss design constraint is 1 ppm per bounce. In the past the diffraction loss has often been calculated using the clipping approximation that, in general, underestimates the diffraction loss. We develop a code…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
