Sat Jan 31 10:06:56 2026 INFO: Fill completed in 6min 52secs
Jennie W, Jason O, Masayuki N, Keita K, Jim W,
Summary: To check the function of the new EOM in chamber we made a measurement of the modulation indexes by locking the IMC and aligning the beam to AS_C with SR2. We couldn't get a good measurement of the sideband heights but this is probably due to the RF power being down by a factor of 100 from nominal. Will check with EE/Daniel on Monday.
First order of business was checking for stray beams at 100mW input power. Jason moved the BD we already placed for JM2 as we had moced this mirror position yesterday. We also put a new beam dump right after unused JAC port (output side there is tranismission through the curced mirror).
After this we turned the power up to 1W.
Lastly we found a stray beam exiting the table in the -Y direction, this was traced to the JAC REFL path. The REFL beam was hitting the side of a beam dump (near the -X side/PSL of the table) which is meant to cath a beam reflecting off the SEPTUM plate. This beam reflected off the beam dump causing a stray beam. We re-aligned the REFL path so the beam does not do this and instead bounces off the three REFL path steering mirrors and heads into a previously placed beam dump for this purpose on the -Y side of the table. This path will have to be re-aligned in order for the beam to get onto the IOT1 table.
No further stray beams were found so Jason de-energised the waveplate.
Photos to come.
After realising that the beam did not reach the AS_C,A and B QPDs yet we came to the control room to re-align to the output port. This is with the ITMY, PRM and SRM mirrors mis-aligned to allow us to mode scan the OMC in the 'single bounce' IFO configuration.
After Jim re-isolated HAM4,5 and 6 and BSC2 for us we were able to use SR2 to bring back the alignment to AS_C and then turn on the DC centering loops for AS_A and AS_B.
The OMC ASC did not work at first as the suspensions were railed. I cleared the ASC history, this did not help. We cleared the locking filter banks for OM1-3 and this unrailed the outputs and allowed us to turn on the OMC ASC.
We took an OMC scan at 1W input power, shown here. Roughly calibrated into MHz with the known FSR.
We cannot identify the 45MHz or 9MHz peaks, but after checking we realied that these RF driver powers were lowered 15 days ago. See image.
We will come back to this Monday.
Jason put back the rotation stage, locked it out and closed the light pipe.
In the control room, the alarm handler was complaining about opticsd lab dust monitor.
It seems that it surged up and stayed there for about half an hour. I acknowledged the alarm (the dust conts are already back to normal, it seems).
Not sure what happened but this seems to happen kind of regularly.
J. Wright, J. Oberling
As part of WP 13006, we added another beam dump and moved one to ensure all stray beams that we could find were properly dumped.
We added the required beam dump on the unused output port of the JAC, to dump the unused beam here. We also moved the beam dump that catches the leakage beam through JM2 so that it continues to dump this leakage beam in JM2's new location (needed to move JM2 as a result of EOM installation). See the 2 attached pictures.
While scanning for other stray beams, I noticed a beam on the outside of the large beam dump that was temporarily relocated to the +X side of the new JAC input periscope. This was traced to the JAC REFL path. Turns out that when the REFL path was installed, the beam was erroneously reflected off of this beam dump on its way from JACR-M1 to JACR-M2. To fix this we had to loosen the dog clamps for JACR-M1 and physically rotate it until the beam was centered on JACR-M2 (there wasn't enough range in the yaw actuator). We then had to loosen and physically rotate JACR-M2 so that the REFL beam was once again captured in its temporary beam dump (dump located on the -Y side of the ISI). Both mirrors were re-secured to the table. Unfortunately, this means that we will have to revisit REFL path alignment to the new IOT1 table.
Modulation depth measurement work has been completed for the day, so I have returned the PSL power in HAM1 to 0.1 mW and de-energized and locked out the PSL rotation stage. The PSL shutter has also been closed and locked out for the weekend.
We will need to revisit the modulation depth measurement on Monday, so I am leaving WP 13006 open and extending its date.
Today Rahul and I worked on reducing the last bit of clipping in HAM7. The power budget shows a couple of percent more loss than we've expected previously, but I don't think we can improve it much right now so this is good enough. QPDA segment 3 is railed.
This morning we found that we had some loss on B:L2, see Rahul's power budget alog as of lunchtime: 88971. In hindsight, this was also possible in the power budget that Kar Meng reported before the suspension work this week, 88847. We translated the beam in the -Y direction in the SFI2 aperture, so it would make sense that we might need to translate the lens in the -Y direction. However, there is no space to move it because the mount is already as close as it can be to SFI2 (photo). So, we translated the beam using B:M3, using the power meter to judge when we were improving the alignment. We found that this aperture is very small, there isn't much of a plateau where we aren't clipping.
After doing what we could to reduce the yaw clipping here we did a careful power budget with the thorlabs power meter, we seem to have 8% loss to SQZT7, 11-14% loss from output of the OPO to the homodyne, which is a bit worse than past measurements ( 65066):
We attempted to move B:M3 in pitch to see if we could reduce clipping on B:L2 that way, but that did not improve the transmission. In pitch we also saw that we increased the clipping with small moves in either direction. I will try to look up the beam size and aperture size next week to see if this makes sense.
We adjusted B:B4 and ZM4 a bit to align onto the two irises on SQZT7.
We also walked the two picomirrors used to center the FC QPDs, with the seed beam which saturates the diode. From the control room I reduced the power and was able to mostly center, but it seems that QPDA segment three has been railed at 33.9 since November 29th.
After we finished up, I went back to check the FCGS alignment onto SQZT7, which was not good, so I went back in for a few minutes to get that beam onto the filter cavity reflection diode. I also had a look at the red + green co-alignment, which looks similar to what Kar Meng posted in 88859.
We also checked that the new cable routing doesn't block the beam onto H:PD1, we couldn't see the beam but we think it looks like a clear path. Rahul also took a photo of where the beam exits SFI2.
TITLE: 01/31 Day Shift: 1530-0030 UTC (0730-1630 PST), all times posted in UTC
STATE of H1: Planned Engineering
INCOMING OPERATOR: None
SHIFT SUMMARY:
JAC team seems to have made some progress today... the MC was locked in air today.
SQZ Team went to align the beams in HAM7.
Rotation stage is de-energised, Lightpipe is currently open. The JAC team are hoping to get some tests done before EOD, and the LightPipe will be closed before they leave.
LOG:
| Start Time | System | Name | Location | Lazer_Haz | Task | Time End |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22:49 | SAF | LVEA IS LASER HAZARD | LVEA | YES | LVEA IS LASER HAZARD \u0d26\u0d4d\u0d26\u0d3f(\u239a_\u239a) | 16:49 |
| 15:41 | FAC | Nellie | LVEA | N | Technical Cleaning | 17:20 |
| 15:50 | FAC | Christina | MEch room | n | Unloading paper products into Mech room | 16:20 |
| 17:01 | Saftey | McCarthy & Randy | LVEA | N | Looking at HAM1 & HAM7 work | 17:10 |
| 17:25 | JAC | Jason , Masasuki | LVEA HAM1 | Y | In chamber work on HAM1 | 19:34 |
| 17:28 | SQZ | Rahul & Sheila | LVEA HAM7 | yes | SQZr Laser path alignment work | 20:01 |
| 17:44 | JAC | Keita | Optics Lab | n | Looking for parts. | 18:14 |
| 17:48 | FAC | Corey & Randy | LVEA | yes | Craning from Highbay to Biergarden. | 19:00 |
| 19:19 | SPI | Jeff | Optics lab | yes | SPI colimation! | 20:42 |
| 19:50 | Cheta | Jason & Jennie W | Cheta LAB | yes | CHETA work | 19:55 |
| 20:32 | FAC | Randy | LVEA | y | BSC2 work | 21:46 |
| 20:46 | VAC | Gerardo | LVEA HAM1 | y | Turning down the purge air. | 21:05 |
| 21:11 | SPI | Jeff | Optics Lab | y | SPI collimation | 22:38 |
| 21:13 | JAC | Jennie W & Jason | LVEA HAM1 | y | Beam Measurements | 21:20 |
| 21:29 | SQZ | Rahul & Sheila | LVEA HAM1 | y | SQZ beam alignment. Rahul out first. | 00:29 |
| 21:30 | EE | Marc & Yuri | MY | N | dropping off parts. | 21:51 |
| 21:46 | VAC | Gerardo | LVEA HAM1 | y | Turning up purge air | 21:50 |
| 21:51 | JAC | Jason Jennie W & Masiuki | LVEA HAM1 | yes | placing beam dumps on HAM1 | 23:46 |
[Keita, Jason, Masayuki]
Summary
The beam alignment inside HAM1 was carried out using JM2 and JM3 after the EOM installation. Alignment was optimized by observing higher-order modes (HOM) and maximizing TRANS peak power. After verifying the presence of a PDH error signal at IOT2, the demodulation phase was adjusted since the new EOM will change the modulation phase due to the location difference. The IMC was then successfully locked using the common mode servo, following the Guardian sequence manually. The tuned IMC-REFL_A_PHASE was 20.87°
Detailed Procedure
Beam alignment inside HAM1 was performed using JM2 (scratched) after EOM installation. The beam was aligned to an iris placed between JM2 and JM3 using JM2’s mirror position and angle. The beam position matched the iris within approximately ±1 mm.
Further alignment between JM2 and JM3 was done using the iris after the periscope. A beam walking procedure was used: JM2 aligned the first iris and JM3 aligned the second.
After this, the Septum window cover was removed. The beam reached the IOT2 table, but there was a yaw offset. JM2 was further adjusted to correct it (note: yaw in HAM1 corresponds directly to yaw on the IOT2 table).
A small sweep of JM2 in pitch and yaw revealed a very weak resonance peak. To excite the cavity, a 0.1 Hz, 300 cnts signal was sent to the TEST filter of MC2 M1.
The TRANS camera showed the presence of a higher-order mode (HOM) with a pitch misalignment. Beam walking was repeated: small adjustments to JM3, followed by peak maximization with JM2. After several iterations, yaw HOM became dominant, so the axis was adjusted accordingly. A final pitch correction increased the TRANS power to approximately 6 cnts, concluding the alignment.
Returning to the control room, the IOT2 shutter was opened. A PDH error signal was observed, confirming that modulation was present. Since the signal appeared primarily in the Q-phase, the demodulation phase was rotated by 45° using a delay line circuit.
The common mode servo gain was set to 14 dB. When the input switch was engaged, the system began to catch resonance. By enabling the Lock filter on MC2 M3, the cavity successfully locked. The Lock filter for MC2 M2 was then engaged with gain 0.1, and FM3 was turned on, allowing stable long-term lock. These steps followed the Guardian sequence.
A 50 Hz, 400 cnts excitation signal was injected into the IMC_L filter, and the delay line phase was tuned to minimize the RF25_Q_ERR peak. The optimal demodulation phase (IMC-REFL_A_PHASE) was determined to be 20.87°.
Using Vibration Sensors To Gauge Health Of HVAC Fans Site Famis 27735
No big changes here, got a few spikes that are likely DAQ restarts.
TCS Monthly Trends Famis 38836
There are some large spikes in this data on days where we have someDAQ restarts.
(Randy Thompson, Corey Gray)
In preparation for the upcoming Bigger BeamSplitter Suspension (BBSS) Installation at BSC2 in a few weeks (~midMarch), a new type of cleanroom infrastructure was needed too allow for more vertical space for the cartridge to be craned in/out of BSC2. Instead of using our standard large mobile cleanroom (which are used for HAM & BSC chamber work), a smaller clean space will be attached to the elevated work platform for BSC2. There will be a "cleanroom tent" on this platform (here's the platform [white] with 2-sets of 4 "tent poles") and a new array of (qty-4) HEPA Filters Fans (same type as the ones on top of the large mobile cleanrooms which blow down) will be on the side of this cleanroom tent to push air flow horizontally for this elevated workspace for the BBSS install.
Randy designed a unistrut framework for this 4-HEPA fan Array (weighs 377lbs). This morning this assembly was carefully craned into place on top of 3 unistrut brackets attached to the BSC work platform (in between BSC1 & BSC2). For added support, this afternoon, Randy added a "leg support" on both ends of this HEPA Filter Fan Array (here is a photo of one of these legs that is in the Beer Garden).
Note, the HEPA bank wall is intended to be moved from platform to platform when needed, so any interference of other areas due to them is somewhat temporary.
Fri Jan 30 10:07:58 2026 INFO: Fill completed in 7min 54secs
TITLE: 01/30 Day Shift: 1530-0030 UTC (0730-1630 PST), all times posted in UTC
STATE of H1: Planned Engineering
OUTGOING OPERATOR: None
CURRENT ENVIRONMENT:
SEI_ENV state: MAINTENANCE
Wind: 3mph Gusts, 1mph 3min avg
Primary useism: 0.04 μm/s
Secondary useism: 0.40 μm/s
QUICK SUMMARY:
LVEA is LASER HAZARD with HAM1 & HAM7 still open for in chamber work.
Potential HAM7 work:
Tweak Alignment from cable Rubbing, OBO & TF
Potential HAM1 work:
Align Path out
IOT2L Beam profile measurement at 100 mW
Replace JM1/JM3 fixed mirrors with HTTS
Lock MC with HAM1 in air
Bifricate LVEA HAM1/South Bay/Work at Height all Laser Haz, rest of LVEA Laser Safe
This morning Rahul took a transfer function of the OPO suspension and found that adding a zip tie to the new connector didn't help the transfer function, which is still similar to 88921. We decided with Jeff to live with this as it is, and we spent the rest of the day working on resolving the clipping through the VIP introduced by alignment shifts that happened as we were addressing the cables.
We moved A:M3 enough that we no longer see evidence of clipping in the SFI1 both passes, we measure 0.96mW out of the OPO and about the same power in transmission from SFI1 on the the return from the filter cavity. We then saw that the beam was clipping in SFI2, and adjusted B:M1 until we were measuring about 0.88- 0.9mW after SFI2, but we had clipping on the aperture attached to B:L2. We had nearly lost the beam to SQZT7 by this time, so we spent some time restoring that by adjusting pitch on B:M3 and yaw on B:M4 (with the platform unlocked it is difficult to adjust pitch on the tough pitch knob for B:M4). This brought us to a point where we can see 0.7 counts on the OPO IR PD on SQZT7.
At the end of the day, we were still seeing loss at B:L2, where the beam was only about 0.82mW. We also need to restore the alignment onto the irises on SQZT7.
We will need to readjust the alignment onto the filter cavity QPDs before we close the chamber.
Power measured this morning in HAM7,
0.95mW out of OPO
0.92mW out of SFI2
0.83mW ou of B L2
0.83mW on table (and looks centered on both the iris on the able).
We are somehow clipping on the lens (placed after the SFI2), we might move it mechanically since adjusting the beam using mirror is not helping.
Details to follow.
EOM tuning results
It's worth noting that we haven't done any tuning after EOM was transported from the lab to HAM1. Frequencies changed a bit but nothing to worry about.
Below is a table of the dip frequencies and S11 coefficients when the EOM was placed in its final location. They aren't bad, 9 and 45 are as good as anybody can do.
(We also measured them when EOM was placed at the edge of the table, there were measurable differences but nothing disastrous.)
| nominal / measured center frequency [MHz] | measured S11 coeff [dB] at nominal / center frequency |
| 9.100230 / 9.1015282 | -21.96 / -22.29 |
| 24.078360 / 24.074976 | -25.84 / -26.74 |
| 45.501139 / 45.499614 | -23.19 / -23.15 |
| 118.30299 / 118.294670 | -25.29 / -26.0 |
Connection
FieldFox network analyzer was connected to the modulation patch panel at the bottom of PSL rack (which is kind of hard to find, see the first picture). Back of that panel is connected to the in-air cable that runs all the way to the vacuum feedthrough on HAM1.
By connecting 50 Ohm terminator to each in-vac cable, we confirmed from FieldFox that ISC_RF5-B1, B2, B3 and B4 correspond to 9, 45, 118 and 24MHz as specified in D1900511-v12 page 43 and 24.
Before connecting the cables to the EOM, we performed S11 calibration by connecting a short plug, 50 Ohm plug and nothing to the SMA connector of in-vac cables via class B SMA elbow.
After the EOM was relocated to its final location, RF sources were connected to the front of the patch panel.
RF levels of the signals directly coming from the 118MHz and 24MHz RF patch panel were: 10.76dBm for 118MHz, 14.2dBm for 24MHz according to FieldFox.
45MHz and 9MHz come from the EOM driver and I didn't bother to measure the power.
Other things
In three_persons_untangling.jpg, Jennie, Jason and Elena (left to right) are untangling JAC EOM cables together.
About the cable strain relief posts:
The four SMA cables were connected to the SMA elbow connectors on the EOM. The strain relief posts appear to be designed such that each cable is sandwiched between the two viton pieces, with one screw above and one screw below. I was a bit confused about how exactly to use the screws with hex nuts attached. I instead used the third bottom screw to loosen to slide the cable in, and then tighten. It was helpful to have someone else pinch the viton at the top while I tightened the screw. This is how it looks.
The two cables on the right hand side of the EOM mount feed straight through the strain relief into the SMA connection, this is fine. However, the placement of the post on the left hand side is a bit short of where the SMA connections are, so the cable bends a bit to make it through the strain relief post and go to the connector. This is tricky because the SMA cable is also very stiff. I don't know if this is a problem. I took several pictures of how this looks just in case. You can see how one side is straight and the other side is "S" shaped through here.
There are two more angled shots of the EOM in its place on the table.
About EOM placement:
Jason and I lifted and placed the EOM carefully together while Jennie held the cables. We roughly dog-clamped the cables to the table for now. Jason fine-tuned the EOM alignment by lining up the mechanical mount to holes on the table.
Overall, not bad for placement. We opened the light pipe after placement, locked the JAC and saw the beam go in to the EOM and then come out of the EOM on the other side!
To confirm, we used the thorlabs power meter to check. We measured about 82-84 mW before the EOM, and then 79-80 mW coming out of the EOM.
Further alignment work:
We proceeded to try to realign the beam from JM2 to JM3, given the significant deflection of the beam due to the EOM crystal. There are two irises between the mirrors to guide the alignment. Jason found it very tricky to align the beam to both. During the process, JM2 was knocked over and now has some scratching and cracks near the edge of the mirror. It is fine to use it for alignment now, but the mirror will need to be replaced. The team is working on finding a spare now.
EPO Tagged.