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  1. Jan 05, 2021
  2. Dec 29, 2020
  3. Dec 16, 2020
  4. Dec 15, 2020
  5. Dec 11, 2020
  6. Nov 18, 2020
    • Jameson Rollins's avatar
      Merge branch 'force-calibration' into 'master' · c1d60e95
      Jameson Rollins authored
      Displacement to force calibration
      
      See merge request !111
      c1d60e95
    • Jameson Rollins's avatar
      Suspension thermal noise sub-budgets · 45a4be96
      Jameson Rollins authored
      45a4be96
    • Kevin Kuns's avatar
      Suspension thermal noise sub-budgets · 10f24a98
      Kevin Kuns authored and Jameson Rollins's avatar Jameson Rollins committed
      Adds suspension thermal noise sub-budgets. This addresses 1/3 of #51. Suspension thermal noise can now be broken up into horizontal and vertical noise of each of the suspension stages. With one exception, which does not change the total noise, the calculation is the same as the current calculation but the contributions of each stage and direction are tracked separately.
      
      In the current calculation the horizontal and vertical spring constants of each stage are broken up into an upper and lower joint and are stored separately. The total suspension thermal noise is then calculated by adding the contributions of each of these joints using the appropriate temperature of each joint. Instead of adding the contributions of each joint all at once, this MR makes it possible to track each stage with separate `Noise` classes and add them all to a sub-budget.
      
      The noise for each stage is the sum of the noise from that stage's lower joint and the noise from the upper joint of the stage below. In the case of the top mass, the contribution from the upper joint is also included. In the current calculation, for the upper stages, the imaginary part of the horizontal spring constant is equally distributed between the upper and lower joints while it is only attributed to the upper joint for the test mass. The one change this MR makes to the calculation itself is to distribute this equally between the top and bottom joints as is done for the upper stages.
      
      The imaginary part of the vertical spring constant is only attributed to the upper joint of each stage. The blade springs are the only contribution to the vertical spring constant for the upper stages while the lower stage also includes the continuum fibers or ribbons. It's unclear how to break this up into an upper and lower stage as is done in figure 14 of https://arxiv.org/abs/2001.11173, so this MR does not have vertical noise of the test mass. (The noise is included, it's just attributed entirely to the PUM.)
      10f24a98
  7. Nov 17, 2020
  8. Nov 16, 2020
  9. Nov 02, 2020
  10. Oct 27, 2020
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