Reports until 13:52, Friday 15 May 2015
H1 ISC (DetChar, ISC)
gabriele.vajente@LIGO.ORG - posted 13:52, Friday 15 May 2015 - last comment - 10:01, Saturday 16 May 2015(18458)
Coherences

Brute Force coherence report is available here for last night lock:

https://ldas-jobs.ligo.caltech.edu/~gabriele.vajente/bruco_1115716006/

Some highlights, which I find very interesting:

Not much is happening at higher frequency, at least for broad band coherence. However there are a lot of single frequency bins with significant coherence, and I can't list all of them here (I'm too lazy). So look into the table at your favorite line frequency, you might be rewarded with some coherence.

Images attached to this report
Comments related to this report
andrew.lundgren@LIGO.ORG - 15:36, Friday 15 May 2015 (18462)DetChar
After the time that Gabriele looked at, the coherence of CARM with DARM went up to nearly 1 above 500 Hz (and 0.5 at 100 Hz). This seemed to continue for the rest of the lock. All of the loudest glitches, which had peak frequencies at about 200 Hz, showed up in CARM as well as DARM. What is going on?

The first plot is a reproduction of Gabriele's coherence plot. The second is about a half hour later, and the third near the end of the lock. The last is a coherence spectrogram of CARM with DARM during this very loud glitch near the end of the lock, which showed up as strong in CARM as DARM.
Images attached to this comment
sheila.dwyer@LIGO.ORG - 17:06, Friday 15 May 2015 (18467)

LSC-CARM is not used anymore for any feedback to the IFO; we use it sometimes to make an audio channel out of DARM so that we can listen to the IFO.  Stefan was tuning the audio filters after we hit the intent bit last night.

The actual feedback to MC2 from the CARM slow loop goes through the LSC-MCL filter bank. If you want an out of loop CARM sensor you can look at LSC-REFL_A_9I, for the error and control signals you can look at the common mode board channels, eg LSC-REFL_SERVO_ERR_DQ or CTRL_DQ

christopher.wipf@LIGO.ORG - 18:32, Friday 15 May 2015 (18469)

By the way, instead of stealing the CARM filter bank to process audio, you can apply the filter directly in the audio player:

$ cdsutils audio H1:CHANNEL-NAME -f 'filterspec'

where 'filterspec' is a filter design string, as you would type into Foton. (This was requested in CDS bug 797 and added in cdsutils r444.)

jameson.rollins@LIGO.ORG - 10:01, Saturday 16 May 2015 (18480)

It seems unneccesarily confusing to use a named channel with a very clear symantic meaning for something other than it's intended purpose.  Can we not just make some separate filter banks just for filtering audio output?  Either that or use the built-in cdsutils audio filtering that Chris mentioned.