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  <title>ArcAdiA</title>
  <link rel="alternate" href="http://dspace-roma3.caspur.it:80" />
  <subtitle>The DSpace digital repository system captures, stores, indexes, preserves, and distributes digital research material.</subtitle>
  <id>http://dspace-roma3.caspur.it:80</id>
  <updated>2013-05-19T01:53:23Z</updated>
  <dc:date>2013-05-19T01:53:23Z</dc:date>
  <entry>
    <title>AN ADAPTIVE OPTICS SYSTEM FOR THE AUTOMATIC CONTROL OF LASER BEAM JITTERS IN AIR</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://hdl.handle.net/2307/515" />
    <author>
      <name>Grasso, Salvatore</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://hdl.handle.net/2307/515</id>
    <updated>2011-07-05T00:02:35Z</updated>
    <published>2009-04-22T22:00:00Z</published>
    <summary type="text">&lt;Title&gt;AN ADAPTIVE OPTICS SYSTEM FOR THE AUTOMATIC CONTROL OF LASER BEAM JITTERS IN AIR&lt;/Title&gt;
&lt;Authors&gt;Grasso, Salvatore&lt;/Authors&gt;
&lt;Issue Date&gt;2009-04-23&lt;/Issue Date&gt;
&lt;Abstract&gt;Due to their weakness,  the direct detection of Gravitational Waves (GW) has never been&#xD;
demonstrated up to date and therefore it is one of the most investigated fields of research in&#xD;
the recent years. Long baseline interferometric antennas are very promising GW detectors as&#xD;
they perform wideband and low noise measurements based on the fine movement of optics&#xD;
properly suspended for seismic isolation. Among the others,  the Virgo antenna is a large&#xD;
scale ground based interferometer designed for GW detection in the band 10 Hz ÷10 kHz&#xD;
with sensitivity of Hzh 110 23&#xD;
=&#xD;
&#xD;
It is installed on Cascina site (Pisa,  Italy) and&#xD;
represents one of the most performing systems currently operating in the world.&#xD;
Nonetheless,  it has not yet measured any GW event and therefore new efforts are being&#xD;
carried out in order to further suppress the noise and gain an improved sensitivity level that&#xD;
allows several GW measurements per year.&#xD;
The present Doctoral Thesis focuses on the development of a novel Adaptive Optics (AO)&#xD;
system proposed by the author for the active suppression of laser beam jitters at the input of&#xD;
the Virgo antenna. In fact such laser perturbations couple with the interferometer&#xD;
asymmetries and originate additional phase noise that limits the antenna sensitivity.&#xD;
From a short description of the Virgo Project,  it is stated that the requirements for the&#xD;
control of input laser beam jitters correspond to reduction of 40 dB in the low frequency&#xD;
band below 1 Hz and of 20 dB in the region of some tens of Hz. These conditions cannot be&#xD;
fulfilled by standard AO systems based on the Shack Hartmann sensor because of high&#xD;
noise and limited speed.&#xD;
On the other hand,  starting from the theoretical analysis of the aberrated wavefront,  it is&#xD;
possible to demonstrate that laser beam jitters can be alternatively represented in terms of&#xD;
higher order Hermite Gauss modes perturbing the fundamental Gaussian beam or in terms&#xD;
of Zernike polynomials expanding the distorted phase profile. This in turn allows the author&#xD;
to design an innovative AO system that uses interferometric techniques for the extraction of&#xD;
error signals in terms of Hermite Gauss coefficients and automatically corrects the laser&#xD;
beam with an adaptive mirror deformed on Zernike modes. The AO system performs&#xD;
simultaneous correction of 6 degrees of freedom corresponding to first and second order&#xD;
Hermite Gauss modes. In particular its dynamics is well represented by elegant 6x6 matrix&#xD;
equations that are connected to the block diagram of the closed loop automatic control.&#xD;
Using an experimental prototype properly implemented in laboratory,  the proposed AO&#xD;
system is completely characterized in terms of effectiveness and stability from the&#xD;
Facoltà di Ingegneria&#xD;
Dipartimento di Ingegneria Elettronica&#xD;
measurement of its frequency response functions,  that exhibit robust operation on all the 6&#xD;
degrees of freedom. Direct measurements of spectral residual noise show the suppression of&#xD;
60 dB up to 1 Hz and of 20 dB over 200 Hz,  even of astigmatism and defocus modes,  which&#xD;
at the best of the present technology fulfils the Virgo requirements previously stated.&#xD;
Finally,  the quality control of the laser beam cleaned up from jitters is carried out by&#xD;
measuring its transverse intensity and fitting the experimental data with the expected&#xD;
Gaussian profile,  that is matched with 96% reliability using the 2&#xD;
parameter.&#xD;
The AO system developed in this Doctoral Work performs laser beam jitters reduction in&#xD;
good accordance with the theoretical prediction and therefore can be seriously proposed for&#xD;
application to interferometric Gravitational Wave antennas.&lt;/Abstract&gt;</summary>
    <dc:date>2009-04-22T22:00:00Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
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