Lecture Description
LISA's Distrubance Reduction System [DRS] (Drag-Free System) - Week 18, Lecture 33 [by Bonny Schumaker (JPL)]
- Review of LISA: concept, orbit, spacecraft, optics, baseline parameters that affect the DRS
- Requirements and general approach:
- Requirements on proof mass: nongravitational accelerations; centering in housing; alignment with measuring optics
- How these requirements arise from the science we want LISA to do, plus practical issues
- Acceleration requirement compared to achievements on past space missions and earth-based experiments
- LISA's DRS contrasted with accelerometers
The DRS control system (system to control proof-mass and spacecraft degrees of freedom)
- Basic design
- Mathematical model
- Solution of model to get disturbance matrix: How various disturbance sources influence proof-mass acceleration, spacecraft acceleration, and effective acceleration of proof-mass / spacecraft gap
Disturbance sources; their magnitudes; implications for DRS design and control-system parameters
- Spacecraft external disturbances: predominantly fluctuations of solar radiation pressure, and thruster noise
- Direct proof-mass disturbances: magnetic forces, cosmic rays, residual gas, laser photons, radiometric force, thermal radiation pressure; noise forces in proof-mass readout & actuation system
- Most serious issue, for baseline design: noise in the capacitive readout & actuation system that has been chosen as the baseline design
Proof mass - spacecraft coupling forces: gravity gradients, coulomb image charges, ...
- Most serious issues: again associated with capacitive readout & actuation system
Implications and summary
Capacitive readout & actuation systems: Heritage and ground demonstrations to date; importance of tests on the ground as well as in space; torsion-pendulum facility for ground tests
Baseline design of DRS system and alternative options
- The baseline design
- Thruster configuration and requirements
- Spherical proof mass as an alternative to cubes
- Optical readout system as an alternative to capacitive
- Gravitational actuation of proof mass as an alternative to capactive (electrostatic) actuation
Summary
Course Index
- The Nature of Gravitational Waves
- Gravitational Waves Data Analysis
- Gravitational Wave Sources in Neutron Stars
- Introduction to General Relativity: Tidal Gravity
- Mathematics of General Relativity: Tensor Algebra
- Mathematics of General Relativity: Tensor Differentiation
- Introduction to General Relativity (4/5)
- Introduction to General Relativity (5/5)
- Weak Gravitational Waves in Flat Spacetime (1/6)
- Weak Gravitational Waves in Flat Spacetime (2/6)
- Weak Gravitational Waves in Flat Spacetime (3/6)
- Weak Gravitational Waves in Flat Spacetime (4/6)
- Weak Gravitational Waves in Flat Spacetime (5/6)
- Weak Gravitational Waves in Flat Spacetime (6/6); Propagation of Gravitational Waves Through Curved Spacetime (1/5)
- Propagation of Gravitational Waves Through Curved Spacetime (2/5)
- Propagation of Gravitational Waves Through Curved Spacetime (3/5)
- Propagation of Gravitational Waves Through Curved Spacetime (4/5)
- Propagation of Gravitational Waves Through Curved Spacetime (5/5)
- Generation of Gravitational Waves by Slow-Motion Sources in Curved Spacetime (1/2)
- Generation of Gravitational Waves by Slow-Motion Sources in Curved Spacetime (2/2)
- Astrophysical Phenomenology of Binary-Star GW Sources (1/5)
- Astrophysical Phenomenology of Binary-Star GW Sources (2/5)
- Astrophysical Phenomenology of Binary-Star GW Sources (3/5)
- Astrophysical Phenomenology of Binary-Star GW Sources (4/5)
- Astrophysical Phenomenology of Binary-Star GW Sources (5/5); Post-Newtonian G-Waveforms for LIGO & Its Partners (1/2
- Post-Newtonian Gravitational Waveforms for LIGO & Its Partners (2/2)
- Supermassive Black Holes and their Gravitational Waves (1/3)
- Supermassive Black Holes and their Gravitational Waves (2/3)
- Supermassive Black Holes and their Gravitational Waves (3/3); Gravitational Waves from Inflation (1/2)
- Gravitational Waves from Inflation (2/2)
- Gravitational Waves from Neutron-Star Rotation and Pulsation (1/2)
- Gravitational Waves from Neutron-Star Rotation and Pulsation (2/2)
- Numerical Relativity as a Tool for Computing GW Generation (1/2)
- Numerical Relativity as a Tool for Computing GW Generation (2/2)
- The Physics Underlying Earth-Based Gravitational Wave Interferometers (1/4)
- The Physics Underlying Earth-Based Gravitational Wave Interferometers (2/4)
- The Physics Underlying Earth-Based Gravitational Wave Interferometers (3/4)
- The Physics Underlying Earth-Based Gravitational Wave Interferometers (4/4)
- Overview of Real LIGO Interferometers (1/2)
- Overview of Real LIGO Interferometers (2/2)
- Thermal Noise in LIGO Interferometers and its Control (1/2)
- Thermal Noise in LIGO Interferometers and its Control (2/2)
- Control Systems and Laser Frequency Stabilization (1/2)
- Control Systems and Laser Frequency Stabilization (2/2)
- Interferometer Simulations and Lock Acquisition in LIGO
- Seismic Isolation in Earth-Based Interferometers
- Quantum Optical noise in GW Interferometers (1/2)
- Quantum Optical noise in GW Interferometers (2/2)
- LIGO data analysis (1/2)
- LIGO data analysis (2/2)
- The Long-Term Future of LIGO: Facility Limits
- The Long-Term Future of LIGO: Techniques for Improving on LIGO-II
- Large Experimental Science and LIGO as an Example (1/2)
- Large Experimental Science and LIGO as an Example (2/2)
- Resonant-Mass GW Detectors for the HF Band (1/2)
- Resonant-Mass GW Detectors for the HF Band (2/2)
- CAJAGWR talk by W.O. Hamilton on Resonant-Mass GW Detectors
- Doppler tracking of spacecraft for GW detection in the low frequency band
- Pulsar timing for GW detection in the very low frequency band
- LISA (Laser Interferometer Space Antenna) for GW Detection in LF Band: Conceptual Design (1/2)
- LISA (Laser Interferometer Space Antenna) for GW Detection in LF Band: Conceptual Design (2/2)
- LISA's Lasers and Optics (1/2)
- LISA's Lasers and Optics (2/2)
- Time-Delay Interferometry [TDI] for LISA (1/2)
- Time-Delay Interferometry [TDI] for LISA (2/2)
- LISA's Distrubance Reduction System (DRS) [Drag-Free System] (1/2)
- LISA's Distrubance Reduction System (DRS) [Drag-Free System] (2/2)
- The Big-Bang Observatory [BBO]: A Possible Follow-On Mission to LISA
- GW's from Inflation and GW Detection in ELF Band via Anisotropy of CMB Polarization
Course Description
Caltech's Physics 237-2002: Gravitational Waves
A Web-Based Course organized and Designed by Kip S. Thorne, Mihai Bondarescu and Yanbei Chen.
This course contains all the materials from a graduate-student-level course on Gravitational Waves taught at the California Institute of Technology, January through May of 2002. The materials include Quicktime videos of the lectures, lists of suggested and supplementary reading, copies of some of the readings, many exercises, and solutions to all exercises. The video files are so large that it may not be possible to stream them from most sites, but they can be downloaded. Alternatively, the course materials on DVD's can be borrowed via Interlibrary Loan from the Caltech Library (click on CLAS, then on Call Number, then enter QC179.T56 2002 ).
Questions and issues about this course and website can be directed to Mihai Bondarescu or Yanbei Chen.