Estimate of Tilt Instability of Mesa-Beam and Gaussian-Beam Modes for Advanced LIGO
Pavlin Savov, Sergey Vyatchanin

TL;DR
This paper analyzes tilt instabilities in advanced LIGO mirror configurations, showing that nearly concentric Mexican-Hat mirrors significantly reduce tilt instability compared to other designs, while maintaining low thermoelastic noise.
Contribution
It computes tilt-instability torques for Mexican-Hat mirror configurations, demonstrating their advantage in reducing tilt instability in advanced LIGO.
Findings
Nearly concentric MH mirrors have weaker tilt instability than other configurations.
Thermoelastic noise for MH mirrors is low and comparable across designs.
Tilt instability strength ratios vary significantly among configurations.
Abstract
Sidles and Sigg have shown that advanced LIGO interferometers will encounter a serious tilt instability, in which symmetric tilts of the mirrors of an arm cavity cause the cavity's light beam to slide sideways, so its radiation pressure exerts a torque that increases the tilt. Sidles and Sigg showed that the strength T of this torque is 26.2 times greater for advanced LIGO's baseline cavities -- nearly flat spherical mirrors which support Gaussian beams (``FG'' cavities), than for nearly concentric spherical mirrors which support Gaussian beams with the same diffraction losses as the baseline case -- ``CG'' cavities: T^{FG}/T^{CG} = 26.2. This has motivated a proposal to change the baseline design to nearly concentric, spherical mirrors. In order to reduce thermoelastic noise in advanced LIGO, O'Shaughnessy and Thorne have proposed replacing the spherical mirrors and their Gaussian…
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