A magnitude 8 earthquake coming from Chile tripped all the BSC-ISIs on 04/01/14. Sheila's wd plots show that the ISIs tripped on the actuator watchdogs. We suspected that the servo loops were trying to compensate for the common mode seen by the BSC-ISIs at both ends of the arms, thus saturating the actuators. We studied the ground motion recorded by the ground STS at the corner station (BS-STS) and the ground T240 installed at EX (EX-T240) at the GPS time provided by Sheila, in order to find out.
On the attached document:
We could considerably reduce the amount of signal sent to the BSC-ISI actuators during a major earthquake (factor as big as 6), and thus reduce the risk of saturating the actuators, by removing the common mode from the signal we feed to the servo loops of the BSC-ISIs.
Data, plots and scripts are commited to the seismic SVN:
/ligo/svncommon/SeiSVN/seismic/Common/Data/2014_04_01__Chile_Earthquake_Data/
Note 1: X and Y had to be swapped on EX data, and a minus sign was also added to the new x-axis EX data. It is likely that EX T240 is mis-oriented.
Note 2: The calibration of EX-T240 was still the one that JeffK made, at the time we looked at. RichM updated it since.
Units were updated.
Plots and script were commited to the svn.