R&D (FilterCavity)
YuhangZhao - 16:11, Thursday 26 September 2019 (1662)
AA quadrant DC signal long term monitor

Yuhang and Yuefan

While designing the telescope of the automatic alignment, we had one question is that how close we could  put the galvo from the quadrant to have decent range. To answer this question, we should at least have the idea how much the reflection beam could move.

So in order to do this, we tried to do a long term monitor of the DC signal of the quadrant without closing the galvo loop.

The problem is that the filter cavity could not stay lock during the time we record the DC signal, so we only could have data of less than one hour.

 

  1. Record the DC pitch and yaw signal with Dataviewer (fig 1), we could see that for pitch and yaw, the reading are both around 0.2.
  2. For the pitch, we record the beam height at that moment by put a ruler in front of the quadrant. The position of the ruler also recorded. (fig 2)
  3. Move the screw of the galvo to move the beam around 1mm in pitch. Actually the movement done by the screw has a coupling between pitch and yaw, but because we are only checking pitch this time, we didn't care about the yaw value changing.
  4. Checking the difference in the signal in Dataviewer again. (fig 3) Pitch moved to 0.1
  5. Starting from the position of last step, where yaw reading is -0.14, Repeat the steps above on yaw (fig 4), then it changes -0.22. (fig 5)

         So the calibration results are like below,        

  Movement on the quadrant Reading change in Dataviewer
pitch 1.47mm 0.1
yaw 1.84mm 0.1
  1. Since everytime we tried to overlap the input and reflection green by only checking the viewport, the beam may not always go to the same direction, which results in the reflection beam height changing we obsered yesterday and also in the past weeks. But of course closing the galvo loop could make the situation better, but the galvo mirror is quite small, if the beam pointing change is too much, the beam could totally miss the galvo. So probably we should do another long term monitor with galvo loop close.
  2. What we expected the DC signal should be like when the cavity slowly misalign is that in one or both direction the signal should firstly increase and then a sudden drop to zero when the beam is totally off the quadrant. But what we saw is quite different. After discussing with Matteo and Eleonora, we found out this could  be caused by the fact we didn't normalise the pitch and yaw signal with the total power, so the slowly drop we saw is because the power reduction when the beam is moving out of the quadrant.
Images attached to this report
1662_20190926091015_fig1.jpg 1662_20190926091025_fig2.jpg 1662_20190926091034_fig3.jpg 1662_20190926091042_fig4.jpg 1662_20190926091049_fig5.jpg 1662_20190926091101_fig6.jpg 1662_20190927040819_quad2dc.png 1662_20190927040825_30goodr.png 1662_20190927042100_3rdmeasrement.png