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Reports until 07:41, Tuesday 19 May 2026
LHO General
ryan.short@LIGO.ORG - posted 07:41, Tuesday 19 May 2026 (90276)
Ops Day Shift Start

TITLE: 05/19 Day Shift: 1430-2330 UTC (0730-1630 PST), all times posted in UTC
STATE of H1: Planned Engineering
OUTGOING OPERATOR: None
CURRENT ENVIRONMENT:
    SEI_ENV state: MAINTENANCE
    Wind: 4mph Gusts, 1mph 3min avg
    Primary useism: 0.02 μm/s
    Secondary useism: 0.19 μm/s 
QUICK SUMMARY: No alarms overnight, temperatures and dust counts looking normal. More alignment work in HAM2 planned for today along with continued prep on the BBSS in the LVEA west bay. CR workstations and wall FOMs are finishing their restarts.

H1 CDS
erik.vonreis@LIGO.ORG - posted 07:35, Tuesday 19 May 2026 (90275)
Workstations updated

Workstations were updated and rebooted.  This was an OS packages update.  Conda packages were not updated.

H1 SPI
joshua.freed@LIGO.ORG - posted 17:33, Monday 18 May 2026 - last comment - 10:26, Tuesday 19 May 2026(90273)
SPI Pathfinder, RF Install Pt 2, ISIK 80MHz

J. Freed

Update from last time 90231:

1. The funny set up from 90231 (IMG_0627.jpg) Was removed! *Clap*. The Spitter was moved lower on the rack and attached on the side of slot 11 with zip ties  Photoon5-18-26.jpeg Photoon5-18-26at317 PM.jpeg. Note: The metal of the splitter was not separated from the metal of the rack, unsure if nessisary.   Attinuators were added on each side of the splitter. 

2. The 4096 Hz CDS DAC signal was tested and connected to the Double Mixer, the double mixer output was quickly checked on an osciloscope and nothing looked different from testing.

3. The current expected RF power going into the SPI prep chassis is 31.6dBm for both the meas and ref paths (Using 2x 10dB and 2x 2dB attinuators) which is slightly underpower of the expected 32 dBm. Screenshot2026-05-18at52906 PM.png I figure a slight underpower is better than an overpower. But will add a comment here if that changes. Will also check to be sure once the 2W amp is installed

4. Found a box of SPI cables that we bought, (whoops forgot about those). All cables in the current set up were replaced with the bought ones. All cables were also labeled. 

Images attached to this report
Comments related to this report
joshua.freed@LIGO.ORG - 10:26, Tuesday 19 May 2026 (90278)

SPI_HAM3_Linear_ish_Layout.png: I realized now the  Screenshot2026-05-18at52906 PM.png picture is impossible to read clearly. I made a more "linear" and hopefully clearer picture of RF chain. 

Images attached to this comment
H1 IOO (INS, IOO, ISC)
elenna.capote@LIGO.ORG - posted 17:22, Monday 18 May 2026 (90267)
Moving input beam to unclip on HAM2 IO baffles

[Keita, Rahul, Elenna]

Today I moved IM2 and IM3 to bring the beam back to our reference position on IM4 trans QPD and center it on ISS QPD after Keita's move of the mode cleaner mirrors in 90259. This requires some iteration back and forth on both suspensions.

Our desired positon on IM4 trans is P = 0.22 and Y = -0.06. On ISS QPD, it is centered, so P=0 and Y=0.

We are driving MC2 in length, so the mode cleaner is flashing, and there are bright flashes on the QPDs. I am pausing ndscope on a flash and measuring the height of the peak in the fast channel and calculating the pit and yaw position from each QDP segment.

  Start   End
IM2 P slider 765 IM2 P slider 810
IM2 Y slider -187.7 IM2 Y slider -88.7
IM3 P slider -560.7 IM3 P slider -614.7
IM3 Y slider 320 IM3 Y slider 385
       
IM4 trans PIT 0.390 IM4 trans P 0.268
IM4 trans YAW 0.450 IM4 trans Y 0.010
ISS QPD PIT -0.379 ISS QPD PIT -0.059
ISS QPD YAW -0.455 ISS QPD YAW 0.08

Unfortunately, this still results in clipping on the baffles Keita notes above, so we will keep going.

At the nominal IM4 trans position, yaw is pretty well centered. I then moved IM2 to both edges of IM4 trans QPD.

I changed the IM2 yaw slider to -250.7, which brought the yaw position on IM4 trans to 0.85. This made the clipping worse.

I changed the IM2 yaw slider to 90.3, which brought the yaw position on IM4 trans to -0.88. This was still not good enough to fix the clipping on the baffle.

By making a very large move to IM2 yaw slider value of 710.3, this centered the beam in the IM4 baffle. This is a ~800 urad move according to the osems and slider. The IFO REFL beam is still clipped.

I undid the 800 urad move, so the IM2 yaw slider is back to -88.7 for now.

Keita and Rahul went out to measure the position of the beam on MCs 1,2 and 3. We think that we need to make a move of these three mirrors to see if we can unclip the beam on these baffles that way.

We want to note that the positive yaw move of IM2 corresponds to unclipping on the IM4 baffle, this is consistent with the beam motion observed in chamber in the -X direction. However, this is contradictory to the sign on IM4 trans QPD, which was moving to negative yaw when we did this move. We suspect that the segment defintion must be wrong somewhere.

Keita will say more later once we have a chance to analyze the positions in chamber.

To clarify, the slider values of IM2 and IM3 are left at the "end" positions on the table above.

H1 AOS (SUS, SYS)
jason.oberling@LIGO.ORG - posted 17:05, Monday 18 May 2026 (90274)
BBS SUS Cage Aligned to ISI

R. Crouch, B. Weaver, I. Abouelfettouh, J. Oberling, R. Thompson

Today we placed and aligned the BBS SUS cage on the WBSC2 ISI.  In the morning we rough placed the SUS, and thought we had done a really good job on the first attempt.  However, that was fed by a misread of how the Build/Inspect function in PolyWorks, well, works, and upon doing a more thorough measurement (directly measuring a constraining plane to inform SMR radius compensation instead of letting PolyWorks handle it automatically) we found there was a position and rotation error to the cage.

In the afternoon we moved the SUS cage around until things looked really good.  We were well within our +/-1.0 mm XYZ tolerance, but once the SUS had been fully dog clamped to the ISI things shifted (as they do).  In this case, it was roughly 0.5 mm in the +Y direction.  All of our measurement points except one are within tolerance, so we called this good enough for SUS cage placement.  To end, Ryan and I measured the circle that's defined by the lower section of the Figure 8 (the round section of the SUS cage that surrounds the BBS) on both the HR and AR sides of the cage.  The first attachement shows the position deviations of the 4 points we used for cage placement/alignment and the current position of the HR and AR Figure 8; all except the Y axis position of 1 point are within our tolerance.  The second attachment shows the rotation of the SUS cage w.r.t. the ISI; the angles listed are in degrees and are measured from the positive axes they are associated with (so X Ang is measured from the +X axis).  These 2 lines show that the SUS cage is rotated roughly 400 - 500 µrad CCW (top-down view) from nominal.

Next up is to set up a total station looking at the AR face of the BBS to precisely align the optic to the ISI.

Images attached to this report
H1 SUS (EPO, SUS)
ibrahim.abouelfettouh@LIGO.ORG - posted 16:49, Monday 18 May 2026 (90272)
BBSS secured and aligned on ISI

Ibrahim, Betsy, Randy, Jason, Ryan C

Today, we lifted the BBSS into the ISI. We then secured and aligned it with the help of IAS (Ryan C and Jason - seperate alog which will be linked later).

We used the aluma lift and dog clamps with the help of teflon pads to move the strucutre about the lift within dog clamp boundaries to align it to the ceiling to the model.

The alignment was done by touching the FARO SMR to the corners of the top of the lower structure to determine if translation or rotations were needed on the structure.

We also inspected BBS01 and found some particulate on the center of S1. Thankfully, it blew off using the N2 Top Gun.

Particle counts were checked in cleanroom periodically and were below 50 consistently.

See pictures.

Images attached to this report
LHO General
ryan.short@LIGO.ORG - posted 16:33, Monday 18 May 2026 (90271)
Ops Day Shift Summary

TITLE: 05/18 Day Shift: 1430-2330 UTC (0730-1630 PST), all times posted in UTC
STATE of H1: Planned Engineering
INCOMING OPERATOR: None
SHIFT SUMMARY: Alignment work continued in HAM2 today, along with more prep of the BBSS and IAS surveying on the test stand. Since SPI alignment is ongoing on the optics lab, the laser remains on and running unattended with appropriate barriers and signage up.
LOG:

Start Time System Name Location Lazer_Haz Task Time End
19:43 SAF LASER HAZARD LVEA YES LVEA IS LASER HAZARD Ongoing
14:50 FAC Kim LVEA - Technical cleaning 16:09
15:19 VAC Jordan LVEA - Pump checks 15:26
15:55 FAC Randy, Jeff LVEA - Moving IOT2L a little 16:16
15:55 SPI Jeff Opt Lab Local SPI prep 18:28
16:29 IAS Jason, Ryan C LVEA - BS FARO surveying 19:55
16:30 ISC Keita LVEA - Opening lightpipe 16:44
16:46 SUS Betsy, Ibrahim LVEA - BBSS work 18:34
16:52 TCS TJ LVEA - Checking on TCSY water lines 17:10
17:09 SUS Randy LVEA - BBSS work 20:09
17:18 SPI Josh LVEA - SPI work at SUS-R2 18:32
18:04 ISC Keita LVEA Y HAM2 beam alignment 18:28
19:26 SPI Jeff Opt Lab Local SPI alignment 21:53
19:37 ISC Keita LVEA Y HAM2 beam alignment 19:47
20:10 SEI Fil MER n HEPI electronics work Ongoing
20:10 SPI Josh LVEA - SPI work at SUS-R2 Ongoing
20:11 SUS Betsy, Ibrahim LVEA - BBSS work Ongoing
20:28 SUS Randy LVEA - BBSS work 21:38
21:06 IAS Jason, Ryan C LVEA - BS FARO surveying Ongoing
22:24 ISC Keita Opt Lab - Looking for parts 23:02
22:44 ISC Rahul Opt Lab - Looking for parts 23:02
23:03 ISC Keita, Rahul LVEA Y HAM2 beam alignment Ongoing
H1 SPI
jeffrey.kissel@LIGO.ORG - posted 16:21, Monday 18 May 2026 - last comment - 10:50, Tuesday 19 May 2026(90270)
2026-05-18 SPI Pathfinder Status Update
J. Kissel

Picking up from last Friday (2026-05-15, LHO:90253), today I:
    - Secured D_R_P1 and D_M_P1 and confirmed that TFP REFL beams went into the dumps
    - Started aligning REF path and migrating optics over from the D2400107-v4 breadbord's CVM100 mounts into / onto D2400107-v5 IXM100 mounts:
        . R_M1 migrated.
        . Re-set up the power meter gantry assembly (since its only me, and I need the power meter stable for maximizing throughput thru irises)
        . Placed irises in holes 83 and 84, adjusted R_F1 and R_M1 to walk and align the beam thru irises, confirming with IR camera view of iris holes and power meter thru-put. 
        . Secured R_F1 and R_M1 IXM mount 8-100 alignment screw shaft set screws, since these optics shall not move again.
        . R_B1 migrated.
        . Aligned beam through holes 86 and 95, repeating process above, but only adjusting R_B1.
        . Uncapped IFO_REF A and B PDs, PWRIN_REF PD and hooked them up to the o-scope (discovering a minor re-cabling issue; see LHO:90268)
            UNSOLVED SIDEQUEST (1) :: PWRIN_REF PD has a ~120 Hz oscillation on it.
        . R_B2 migrated.
        . Aligned beam through holes 98 and 99, repeating process above.
            UNSOLVED SIDEQUEST (2) :: Now, with D_FBR_PWRIN_REF so far away, the known issue with its PD seating within the generic enclosure means the PD reflected beam is ~2 inches above the board. Tried a huge 2"x3" dump but that was too big.
        . R_B3 migrated.
        . With nothing to align, just checked that beam went through irises in holes 100 and 97, and that beam looked well centered on PD. They did.
        . Migrated D_IFO_REF_B and D_IFO_REF_A, confirmed PD reflection landed on there and it did.

Done for the day! The MEAS PATH alignment tomorrow!
Images attached to this report
Comments related to this report
jeffrey.kissel@LIGO.ORG - 10:35, Tuesday 19 May 2026 (90277)
Regarding UNSOLVED SIDEQUEST (2) :: Now, with D_FBR_PWRIN_REF further away [...] the PD reflected beam is ~2 inches above the board.

Here're some picture to aide the discussion.

I say "this is a known issue," because we'd encountered this particular PD's pitch of the diode when assembling the CVM100 version of the ISIK transceiver, D2400107-v4, but in that layout, the PD was angled away from the incoming beam in the opposite direction and the the dump was closer. We didn't have room behind R_B2 to have the same dump location with the upgrade to IXM100 mounts.

None of the other PDs have this issue, the beam reflects back at the same 1 [inch] beam height that's the beam height for the board.

We were in too much of a rush and had too little experience/expertise with these to consider cracking open the Generic PD enclosure (D1600083) to try to fix it.
We suspect, in this Type 3 assembly for the FFD200 PDs, that either 
    - the PD (line item 12 T1000573) is not seated well in its retaining ring (line item 4 D1600082),   
    - there's a defect or something stuck between the retaining and its seat in the enclosure housing (line item 1 D1600079)
    - the retaining ring is not *exactly* the same size as the Q3000 for which it was designed and there's some slop in the assembly, or
    - the PD's pins were soldered into the PCB at an angle (line item 11 D1700116)
But we're just guessing. 

This is S2401094, whose assembly technique is discussed in CIT:837 and record of completion is mentioned in CIT:898.

Starting up the conversation with CIT.
Images attached to this comment
jeffrey.kissel@LIGO.ORG - 10:50, Tuesday 19 May 2026 (90279)
Regarding UNSOLVED SIDEQUEST (1) :: PWRIN_REF PD has a ~120 Hz oscillation on it.

See attached o-scope picture -- channel 3 (purple). 2V peak-to-peak wobbly 120 Hz oscillation on a 4.5 [V] mean.

We've not tested this PD since we updated its transimpedance circuitry (see LHO:90105, and TIA Variant 3 D1002481 instantiation S2500713), so there may be a grounding issue there. Hard to believe it's the TIA op-amp itself, given that the RC feedback impedance we installed yields a 13.497 [kHz] pole.

I've only tested the IFO MEAS and IFO REF channels of the Variant 2 chassis with light so far, but they don't show any issue.

Laser power level on this PD during yesterday's test is the expected ~0.8 [mW].

I checked (but didn't re- or triple-check) that the electrical ground situation is well-managed. As in March 2026, the electrical ground of power supply feeding the TIAs banana'd-to-BNC'd-to-clip-doodled to the shield the o-scope's clip-doodle dongle whose signal is reading out PD ADC output voltage from a breakout board. Nowhere along this adpater/doodle/breakout/cable chain is metal touching metal.

I'll look through the chain again, try reading it out differentially, and consult with local experts. It isn't a high priority right now, but we need to understand this before the transceiver leaves the optics lab.
Images attached to this comment
H1 PSL
ryan.short@LIGO.ORG - posted 10:05, Monday 18 May 2026 (90264)
PSL 10-Day Trends

FAMIS 63899 

No major events of note; things looking very stable recently.

Images attached to this report
H1 SUS
oli.patane@LIGO.ORG - posted 10:00, Monday 18 May 2026 (90263)
BSFM medm screen OSEM2EUL and EUL2OSEM matrices updated with BBSS values

In preparation for testing out the BOSEMs on the BBSS, I've updated the OSEM2EUL and EUL2OSEM matrix values from the suspension projection values for the BSFM's geometry to projection values from the BBSS's geometry.

OSEM2EUL

before (BSFM projections), after (BBSS projections)

EUL2OSEM

before (BSFM projections), after (BBSS projections)

Images attached to this report
LHO General
ryan.short@LIGO.ORG - posted 07:38, Monday 18 May 2026 (90260)
Ops Day Shift Start

TITLE: 05/18 Day Shift: 1430-2330 UTC (0730-1630 PST), all times posted in UTC
STATE of H1: Planned Engineering
OUTGOING OPERATOR: None
CURRENT ENVIRONMENT:
    SEI_ENV state: MAINTENANCE
    Wind: 12mph Gusts, 6mph 3min avg
    Primary useism: 0.03 μm/s
    Secondary useism: 0.15 μm/s 
QUICK SUMMARY: No alarms over the weekend, temperatures looking normal, dust counts low as well. The same 31 channels are disconnected from the EDC since the CS HEPI pump controller is still down.

Likely continuing with alignment work in HAM2 today following the ISS array replacement.

H1 AOS
robert.schofield@LIGO.ORG - posted 12:41, Sunday 17 May 2026 (90258)
Chamber cleaning did not reduce subsequent particle counts: BSC2 chamber cleaning investigation

TJ and I cleaned the BSC2 aluminum floor, the bottom of the chamber below that, feedthrough nozzles, support tubes and their nozzles (see figure for photo of cleaning and some of the stuff we found). The particulate level while walking around gently did not change significantly from before to after the cleaning (see table below). This and the other cleaning experiments reported in the table suggest that, at the current state of cleanliness,  the dominant source of suspended particulate is the people and the things we bring in rather than dust that we stir up by moving around. 

The dust counts generally returned to low levels a minute or two after the activities in the table.

Just as patting clothes produces more dust, we found that rapid movements produce more dust in the chamber than slow movements. The linked video shows the movement speed and the wiping speed that produced the lower levels in the table below: slow chamber speed

Recommendations:

1. The chambers are currently clean enough that general cleaning is probably counterproductive.

2. Move slowly when possible. This can reduce the particulate suspended from your bunny suit by an order of magnitude.

 

Activity

Particulate per cubic foot*

0.3 um

0.5 um

Standing still in chamber

0

0

Walking around gently in BSC2 before cleaning

150

80

Walking around gently in BSC2 an hour after cleaning aluminum floor, bottom of chamber, and all nozzles

170

85

Wiping aluminum BSC chamber floor

200

50

Wiping feedthroughs and their nozzles

200

70

Cleaning support tubes and their nozzles

100

60

Slow wiping of BSC floor under aluminum floor towards center (lowest part)

200

50

Fast wiping of BSC floor under aluminum floor towards center (lowest part)

800

500

Deploying vacuum hose and accessories

1000

800

Vacuuming up material wiped to center of BSC floor

200

50

Vacuuming bellows with tube accesory that fits between them

600

150

Vacuuming walls in spool piece

200

50

Vacuuming aluminum floor in chamber while hose assembly is dragging

600

200

Waving hand up and down while standing still outside the chamber

150

50

Waving hand up and down while standing still inside the chamber, monitor at same relative position

200

70

* Particle counts are aproximate averages, mostly of 1 minute samples. Repeats suggested that differences in the table of a factor of two or greater are significant. Quiet controls were taken in between reported measurements to ensure that measured levels were not significantly affected by previous activities.  Monitor: Met One  GT-521S laser particle counter 

TJ and Robert

Non-image files attached to this report
H1 IOO (INS, IOO, ISC)
keita.kawabe@LIGO.ORG - posted 23:19, Saturday 16 May 2026 (90259)
IMC alignment work on Friday, not that much success (Keita, with remote help from Elenna and Sheila)

One problem solved, two problems found.

Clipping on IFO REFL baffle is gone.

The problem of IFO REFL beam clipping by the last IFO REFL baffle in HAM2 (see alog 90251, especially this picture) seems to have been caused by a huge PRM change in the PRM alignment sliders made on Monday May/11/2026 past 1700 local time (that none of us knew/remembered/understood).

Once Sheila reverted PRM back to March/2026 alignment, changing the IFO REFL beam path (but not the alignment into ISS path), IFO REFL was not clipped any more even though it looked low on the baffle (IFOREFL_baffle.mp4). LSC and ASC REFL sensors on HAM1 ISI saw the flashes right away without any adjustment of RMs, and the flash peaks were already reasonable. According to Sheila,  compaing to a time when DRMI was acquiring in November:

  • 2W into IMC vs 0.18W into JAC now (9%, the power into IMC is less than that due to extra losses expected for JAC)
  • REFL A nsum 4000 counts then, 218 now (5%)
  • REFL B nsum 3400 then, 204 now (6%)

All of these were a good sign.

Forward-going beam into the IM4 is clipped by the baffle in front of IM4, and the IFO REFL beam is clipped by the baffle at the -Y edge of the IFI.

Unfortunately I've found that there were two other clipping points that I must have missed yesterday using IR viewer. See clipping.png, sorry for a blurry through-IR-viewer picture shot from the distance. Go back to HAM2layout_annotated2.png to figure out which baffle is what.

There's a baffle in front of IM4 between IM4 and IM3, and the forward-going beam is slightly clipped at the +X edge of that baffle.

Also the IFO REFL beam is clipped by the baffle installed at the -Y edge of the IFI. I know this is IFO REFL because the bright spot goes away when I block the beam on PRM by a sheet of aluminum. I cannot quite tell from the picture which edge of the baffle is clipping, but I think it's also +X edge.

In the past, when PRM spot position was measured with full IFO, it was like a mm off according to Sheila, so it's hard to imagine that the beam was clipping on the baffle in front of IM4.

Changing IMC alignment (trial 1, didn't fix clipping).

We decided to back off the changes we've made  for MC1, 2 and 3 since Monday and revert back to in-vac March alignment. If we have to make a huge adjustment to JM3 to follow the IMC, maybe the beam coming from JM3 is suspect (which means that the MC2 trans path is somehow suspect too).

Before I did anything, the starting point was captured in alignment_2026-05-15_16-14-21.png.

MC1/2/3 was reverted just based on slider values and not using OSEM readings as per alignment_2026-03-18.png.

Then JM3 was adjusted in PIT and YAW to give the maximum transmission measured in IM4_TRANS_NSUM. Actually I didn't move JM3 as much as I expected.

That alone couldn't recover a good 00 mode flashing so I moved MC2 and MC3 to follow the input beam.  MC2 moved back closer to the position this morning.

After that I felt as if it was somehow easier to optimize further using MC1 as well as MC3, thinking that it would be a minor adjustment but somehow ended up moving MC1 by a large amount after iterations.

My end point is captured in alignment_202605151726_sliders.png.

Without IM3 and IM2, the beam was still on IM4_TRANS as well as ISS QPD, the flashes were good, so I looked at the clipping on the baffle in front of IM4 as well as the baffle at the -Y edge of the IFI, and they were still there. IFO REFL baffle was still not clipping.

Will have to think about what these all mean.

Images attached to this report
Non-image files attached to this report
H1 SUS
ibrahim.abouelfettouh@LIGO.ORG - posted 15:20, Thursday 14 May 2026 - last comment - 08:43, Monday 18 May 2026(90249)
BBS01 Installed into BBSS

Ibrahim, Betsy, Oli

Today, we installed BBS01 into the BBSS successfully. 

BBS01 was on a table. BBSS was on the aluma lift. We picked BBS01 using the ERGO arm and slowly came into the optic. In this process, we:

  • Removed the EQ stops and replaced them with the glass tips
  • Ensured that the gold wire was held correctly about the lower structure barrell
  • Made contact between the gold wire and the grooves of the prisms
  • Backed the glass tip EQ stops in to contact, securing and locking the whole suspension (M1 and M2 were already locked)
  • Installed the BBSS face shields
  • Practiced a lift of how it would go up into the test stand
  • Placed teflon pads between the lift arms and the BBSS 45 degree lifting bars - LLO did the same (alog 80802) - this helps with fine structure adjustment when below the ISI
  • Covered the BBSS on the lift in prep for test stand install (IAS needs time with the ISI to get exact positions in XY for where BBSS will sit).

On top of pictures below, 2 videos:

Images attached to this report
Comments related to this report
jeffrey.kissel@LIGO.ORG - 08:30, Monday 18 May 2026 (90261)EPO
Wahoo! Congrats, y'all! 
betsy.weaver@LIGO.ORG - 08:43, Monday 18 May 2026 (90262)

Note, current status as of last Thur was handoff to FARO IAS (Jason/Ryan C) who are up for mapping and guiding us into place.  CAD files from CIT arrived Thur so quite literally just in time to get on it.

Also, thanks Travis for all the pictures.

H1 SPI
jeffrey.kissel@LIGO.ORG - posted 11:20, Wednesday 13 May 2026 - last comment - 15:56, Monday 18 May 2026(90228)
SPI Pathfinder ISIK Transceiver In-vac PD cable routing vs. PD / Cable Serial Numbers
J. Kissel 

SPI Wiring Diagram: D2400111-v6
In-chamber in-vac cable routing: In-vac Cable Routing Plan from G2401479-v3

I never aLOGged our choice of cable-table bracket floor assignment down when we originally assembled and signal-checked the D2400107-v4, so during disassembly in prep for upgrade to D2400107-v5 (LHO:90225) I took the time to write down the cable routing, cable serial number assignment, and cable table bracket (CBT) floor assignment:

Path       PD Name         PD SN          Duopus      D9 CBT Name / Floor     Quadrapus    D25 CBT Name / Floor 
                      |----------D2600001--------|  
                      D1600083 Type 2     D2400341    D2000492                D2400343     D2000492 
    
                                                                              S2500512
IFO REF    A/B        S2401096/S2401095   S2500516    CBT 2 / 2nd of 2        cable E      CBT 1 / 1st of 2   
IFO MEAS   A/B        S2401097/S2401098   S2500514    CBT 2 / 1st of 2        cable D      CBT 1 / 1st of 2
FBR PWR    REF/MEAS   S2401094/S2401093   S2500515    CBT 3 / 2nd of 2        cable C      CBT 1 / 1st of 2

                           PD SN          Monopus 
                      |----------D2600002--------|
                      D1600083 Type 3     D2400340

OL ISIK    QPD B      S2401091            S2500518    CBT 3 / 1st of 2        cable B      CBT 1 / 1st of 2

First and Second of the attached pictures are of the CBT 2 cable routing. I needed two pictures because the D9 end's two-part backshell of IFO REF cable was assembled with its serial number stamped on one side of one part, and the other side of the other part. C'est la vie.

Third picture is of CBT 3's cable routing.

The 2x D9 CBT assemblies (since the "type" we've assembled is not explicitly drawn in D2000492) are 
    - QTY 1x D2000519 baseplate
    - QTY 1x D2000520 "Type 2" two-floor uprights, with
    - QTY 2x D2200443 D9 adapters,
    - QTY 2x 1/4"-20 x 0.625" L captive SHCS (95966A512) for securing to the HAM table (rather than the 3/8"-16 captive SHCS that are used to secure to the BSC tables)
    - QTY 2x #6-32 x 0.375"L SHCS (92200A146) for securing the baseplate to the upright
    - QTY 2x per D9 adapter (4x total) #4-40 x 0.224"L ("2D"; 1185-04EN224) nitronic 60 helicoils for each of the upright holes
    - QTY 2x per D9 adapter (4x total) #4-40 x 0.5"L captive SHCS (95966A140) for securing the adapters to the upright

For the single D25 2-floor CBT that holds the D25 ends of the PD and picomotor quadrapuses, we used the standard D2000492 Type 2 configuration.
Images attached to this report
Comments related to this report
jeffrey.kissel@LIGO.ORG - 11:02, Wednesday 13 May 2026 (90229)
Pictures of the D1600083 Generic PD enclosure ends of the D2600001 Assemblies

In order of their appearance in D2400111-v6 page 3:
    - IFO_REFA
    - IFO_REFB
    - IFO_MEASA
    - IFO_MEASB
    - FBRPWRIN_REF
    - FBRPWRIN_MEAS
    - QPD_B
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jeffrey.kissel@LIGO.ORG - 15:56, Monday 18 May 2026 (90268)
The main aLOG's table of cables and the pictures of the cables are correct BUT my *labels* of the picture are wrong for the Cable Table Bracket #2 (also, I abbreviated Cable Table Bracket as CBT rather than CTB).

I attach new versions of the pictures correctly labeled.

Found this after re-achieving light the REF PDs today, as the IFO REF PD signals appeared on the SPI TIA Variant 2 ADC output CH3 and CH4 which should be the IFO MEAS PDs (per LHO:89775).
Sure-enough, I had paired the IFO MEAS PD duopus S2500514 with the E leg of the S2500512 quadrapus, and the IFO REF duopus S2500516 with the D leg, because I'd followed the *labels* of the picture to reconstruct the cabling.

All fixed now in the D2400107-v6 assembly (and I confirmed that the C and B legs are hooked up correctly to the FBR_PWRIN and QPDB correctly and match the table, pictures, labels and ADC CH assignment.).
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H1 IOO
keita.kawabe@LIGO.ORG - posted 00:54, Wednesday 13 May 2026 - last comment - 10:19, Monday 18 May 2026(90219)
ISS path alignment: Not much progress on Tuesday due to distraction/confusion (Elenna, JennieW, Keita)

We started with yesterday's alignment. I checked flashes in ISS array PDs and didn't like that the balances between them were very much different from how they were when IMC was locked back in March.

Then we started changing IM2 and IM3 to see if we can get back, but I was appalled that the flashes became stronger and stronger on array PDs as we aligned, which probably means that the beam was almost falling off of the PDs when we started. 

That shouldn't have stopped us because we don't know where the beam was on the array PDs when MC was locked (people gave up optimizing that path because things didn't make sense), it could have been falling off of the diode (because each diode is 2mm,  QPD is 3mm, the beam size is ~250um or so, and the beam was almost in one quadrant of the QPD). But I started thinking about many what-ifs and wasted time.

After all, since IM4 TRANS and ISS array QPD are both reasonably close to March 2026 position, we know that the beam position as well as angle of the beam injected into ISS path from IM4 are already close to those when IMC was good in vacuum.

What we should do is this:

  • Revert back to Monday IM2/IM3 alignment. Confirm that the IM4 trans position as well as ISS array QPD position are OK.
  • Check flashes in 2nd loop inloop and out-of-loop sum. Recheck if at least one of them is comparable to when IMC was locked back in March, taking into account the power difference, even though Sheila checked it yesterday. At this point, we'll have established again that the position and the angle of the beam coming into the ISS path are reasonable.
  • Check that the beam in ISS path is nowhere near being clipped by baffles and ISS array cover and the elevator aperture of the ISS array. Don't fix clipping right away, do it after swapping the array because we'll have to move pico mirrors anyway.
  • Swap the array. There's no assurance that the beam will be on the QPD right away but that's OK. We can move the unit on the spacer if that helps. Go as close as you can, then start using the two pico steering mirrors. Use the array input aperture to aid the process.
  • Once you see the beam on the QPD, continue to center the QPD, fix clipping, not necessarily in this order.
  • Check the flash height of array PDs as well as QPD, see if things makes sense.

Other things to note:

This is not required for the alignment but it's helpful to know how much we can move the beam on QPD. In an unlikely event where we somehow lose the beam in vacuum on the array QPD after IMC is locked, we might be able to scan IM3/IM2 to regain the beam on QPD, and slowly move IM3/IM2 back to the nominal position while pico-ing so the beam isn't lost on the QPD. If the beam is not clipped, the beam displacement on the QPD is ~3mm per 1mrad of IM3 rotation using parameters collected from various documents, see attached script.

The same script shows you that the Gouy phase separation between two pico mirrors is 10 degrees (if we use the beam parameter in Matt Heintze's alog 12537, which was probably obtained by the measurement of the bypassed beam) or about 20 degrees (if we use IMC eigenmode parameter propagated to the ISS path using D1200693).

Another thing is, if we believe the design eigenmode number rather than the measured bypassed beam in Matt's alog, the beam waist will be smaller and at about 20cm upstream of the PDs. The beam size on the PDs is about twice as large as it should be (470um rather than 250um). I cannot measure the beamsize of the flashes so we won't do anything, but that's something to remember. If IM3 has enough actuation range, we can later lock the IMC, scan the beam across the PD until the beam falls off, see how sharp the fall-off is, and use the diameter of the PD (3mm) to determine the size of the beam. Maybe a good project for a fellow.

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keita.kawabe@LIGO.ORG - 09:10, Wednesday 13 May 2026 (90224)

One of the things that bothered me (that isn't directly related to ISS alignment) is the fact that we had to rotate JM3 by a huge amount, i.e. negative 200um in PIT to "center" the MC2 trans QPD. This is the equivalent of the negative YAW rotation of the beam in IMC's coordinates (clockwise seen from the top). Since the distance between MC2 and JM3 is ~19m according to E2400218, this means that the MC2 beam position was moved by about ~7.6mm in -Y direction on MC2. This seems to roughly corroborate with the pictures in alog 90203 ("before" picture and  "after", hard to tell how much it actually moved due to parallax but there's no doubt that the motion was large).

What if this is because something is wrong with the MC2 trans path? Like the pico mirror in front of the QPD was bumped (by a huge amount, however unlikely it is). My conclusion is that we can lock IMC in vacuum, use WFS with MC2 centering, measure the centering on MC2 using dither, and figure it out. If QPD center is grossly off from the MC2 center, we can pico.

 

keita.kawabe@LIGO.ORG - 10:19, Monday 18 May 2026 (90265)

Sorry the script in the above alog didn't work because it was missing one line.

Attached is a working version. You need a la mode matlab package https://github.com/nicolassmith/alm.

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