Reports of 34285
IOO (IMC)
kenta.tanaka - 11:09 Friday 22 May 2026 (36945) Print this report
Strange offset in IMC IP PZTs were applied. Please do not touch PZT offsets if you cannot take care of the PZT driver or PZT themselves.

Tanaka, Fujimoto

We found that IMC IP PZTs were applied strange offset during today's initial alignment. During initial alignment by ST students, IMC could not be locked because IMC alignment become worse. Whole we investigated the cause of the misalinment, we found the issue. 

PZT offset value is set to the middle (75 V) of the range (0-150V). On the other hand, offset value seems to be changed two times recently, May 11th and April 22th respectively (fig.1). In the PZT2, the offset value was changed to the negative value (-22V). The PZT driver could not be receieved the negative value because the negative voltage will break the driver or PZT itself. Since PZT offsets are not changed automatically, they are changed by human.

Fortunately, we restored PZT offsets to nominal value, then IMC alignment was restored.

Please do not touch PZT offsets if you cannot take care of the PZT driver or PZT themselves.

Images attached to this report
MIF (ITF Control)
satoru.takano - 8:48 Friday 22 May 2026 (36943) Print this report
Trial on DRMI

[Fujimoto, Tanaka, Takano]

Summary

We tried to lock DRMI for the first time since the last RSE trial. Several problems were found to be solved.

Detail

For the first time since the last RSE trial 6 years ago, we started the work on DRMI locking.

Preparation works:

  1. The interferometer was first aligned by students from ST [Kawakami, Hasegawa, Abe] with the great help of Kenta.
  2. We moved on to aligning SRM using SRY. We encountered a strange behaviour with the locking point, but Hiroki miraculously solved it.
  3. After aligning SRM with SRY ADS, we offloaded the value using the offload function, but it didn't work well. Further investigation is necessary.
  4. We misaligned SRM again and aligned PRMI. We manually aligned PRM to improve the POP90 buildup, but the maximum was ~ 0.4, which should be close to 1.
  5. Once PRMI was locked with 3f signals, ADS was engaged, but it took a very long time, and the buildup never exceeded 0.5.
  6. We stopped ADS and manually moved BS in pitch, then the buildup increased. This indicates that PRMI ADS doesn't work now.
  7. Manual alignment tweaking for BS and PRM was done, and the buildup reached ~ 0.8.
  8. While working, many glitches were observed and they disturbed (probably) MICH control. At the same time, bright beam spots appeared on the bottom of ITMX and ITMY. It seems that the reflection from SRM was close to the main beam and f1 sidebands barely resonated. We need to misalign SRM more, but unlike ITMs, MISLIGNED_BF state is not prepared for Type-B. Probably we have to move IPs.

DRMI trial

We realigned SRM and tried to lock DRMI in these ways:

  1. Hiroki's idea: use 1f signals
    1. Plan to use REFL45I for PRCL, POP17Q for MICH, and POP17I for SPRCL.
    2. We estimated the expected gain for them using Finesse simulations and put these gains in the sensing matrix.
    3. Wait for a while. Noticed that the gain for SRCL was bigger by one order than the other and seemed to kick SRM a lot.
  2. Satoru's idea: use 3f signals
    1. Plan to use REFL135I for PRCL, REFL51Q for MICH, and REFL51I for SPRCL.
    2. We intentionally misaligned SRM by changing the oplev setpoint and locked PRMI.
    3. We gradually aligned the SRM and hoped that PRMI would stay locked, but it turned out that MICH control was vulnerable to f1 resonance in SRC.
    4. Then we fully aligned SRM, and left all three servos on. We set triggers and waited for being locked. Sometimes AS34 buildup was held in < 1 sec, but it didn't last for long.

After several hours of trial and error, we concluded that we need to develop effective locking strategies.

Notes

While thinking of strategies, we found these issues:

  1. The Schnupp asymmetry in KAGRA is too big for stable control of MICH
    1. In LIGO and Virgo, they are O(cm), and the Michelson reflectivity is almost 0 for f1, which makes the SRC undercoupled. Thanks to it, MICH signal with 1f and 3f is relatively insensitive to SRCL and easier to keep locking than KAGRA.
    2. For KAGRA, it's overcoupled (Michelson: R=15%, SRM: R=85%) and f1 buildup in SRC is quite big. This makes MICH sensitive to SRC resonance for f1.
  2. We investigated the possibility of using f3. It is said that f3 doesn't resonate in any cavities, but Finesse simulations show that it actually resonates in both PRC and SRC. Are we wrong, or are the simulations?
MIF (ITF Control)
satoru.takano - 8:16 Friday 22 May 2026 (36944) Print this report
Comment to Strange offset in POP17 for locking SRY (36935)

We confirmed that this offset disappeared when ITMX was in MISALIGNED_BF state. For SRM alignment using SRX or SRY, we should misalign ITMY or ITMX by MISALIGNED_BF, not MISALIGNED.

MIF (General)
dan.chen - 6:46 Friday 22 May 2026 (36942) Print this report
Initial alignment

Summary

I performed initial alignment for XARM, YARM, and OMC. XARM required small ITMX and ETMX adjustments, and YARM required a BS adjustment. For OMC, I also adjusted OMMT1 a little.

Details

Preparation

PRM and ITMX were changed to MISALIGNED. I tried to check the SRC flash by changing SRM to ALIGNED, but no clear SRC flash was observed. SRM was then returned to MISALIGNED.

Initial Alignment

I confirmed that FIB and PNC were locked as expected, and opened all laser shutters.

For XARM, IRX_LOCKED and GRX_LOCKED_WITH_IRX were achieved. During ALIGNING_XARM, I adjusted ITMX and ETMX: (ITMX P, ITMX Y, ETMX P, ETMX Y) = (5.0, -12.5, -7.9, -9.1) to (5.0, -13.3, -7.9, -9.6). I then recorded the good values and offloaded the alignment.

For YARM, IRY_LOCKED and GRY_LOCKED_WITH_IRY were achieved. During ALIGNING_YARM, I adjusted BS: (P, Y) = (6.8, -38.5) to (5.8, -37.2). I then recorded the good values and offloaded the alignment.

OMC

PRM was changed to MISALIGNED_BF to increase the laser power, and the GRX and GRY shutters were closed.

I adjusted the OMMT1 alignment to make the beam position on OMMT2 QPD at center. The OMMT1 TM OPTICALIGN was changed from (P, Y) = (-24000, -4400) to (-25000, -4600). The QPD sum was about 8.

OSTM was changed to MISALIGNED_FOR_LOCK_ACQ to avoid unnecessary OMC flashes. I then changed the laser power by rotating the PSL HWP from 150 deg to 162 deg, and then returned it to 150 deg. The beam on the QPD was confirmed to be the IR beam.

Recovery

OSTM was returned to LOCK_ACQUISITION, and PRM was returned to LOCK_ACQUISITION.

MIF (ITF Control)
Hiroki Fujimoto - 4:47 Friday 22 May 2026 (36941) Print this report
Explaining the origin of the SRY dark lock

[Takano, Tanaka, Fujimoto]

Summary

While trying to lock the SRY on carrier resonance, we observed that the cavity occasionally locked to a dark state at transmission even though the sign of the feedback control had not been changed.
We found that this phenomenon is a carrier anti-resonant lock originating from the low finesse (~4) of the SRY and the FSR difference between the SRY and SRC.

Details

While aligning the SRM for DRMI locking using carrier-locked SRY (ITMX: MISALIGNED_BF, PRM: MISALIGNED, Guardian: vertex/SRY_1F_LOCKED), we observed that the SRY transmission ports (REFL, POP, and AS) sometimes locked to the bright state (carrier resonant, Fig. 1), but occasionally locked to a dark (anti-resonant) state instead (Fig. 2).
Therefore, we investigated the origin of this dark lock.

Fig. 3 shows time-series data obtained during a cavity scan by applying an offset of 30000 to K1:VIS-PRM_TM_TEST_L_OFFSET.
The blue trace is the error signal (POP17-I), while the orange, green, and red traces are AS DC, POP DC, and REFL DC, respectively.
From the transmission resonance peaks and the error signal, it can be seen that an error signal with the same sign as the carrier resonant lock exists even at the anti-resonant point.
The same behavior is also reproduced in the analytical simulation (Fig. 4).

The origin of this anti-resonant error signal can be understood as follows.
Since the current cavity configuration is SRY, its FSR differs slightly from that of the SRC (FSR_{SRY}=2.20 MHz, FSR_{SRC}=2.25 MHz).
Therefore, when the carrier is resonant in the SRY, the f1 sidebands are shifted away from the perfect anti-resonant condition (= half-integer multiple of the FSR), corresponding to

f_1 = 7.68 * FSR_{SRY}.

In addition, the SRY is a low-finesse cavity (F~4) formed by (BS ⇒ ITMY ⇒ BS ⇒ SRM ⇒ BS).
As a result, when the carrier is anti-resonant, the f1 sidebands are located on the side lobe of the cavity resonance peak.
Therefore, fluctuations of the laser frequency or cavity length produce asymmetry in the amplitudes of the sidebands transmitted through the SRY and entering the POP RFPD, generating an AM sideband component.
This AM sideband component beats with the carrier transmitted through the anti-resonant SRY, producing an error signal even at the carrier anti-resonant point.
This is the origin of the SRY dark lock.

If we wants to avoid this dark lock in the SRY, the feedback loop can be enabled/disabled using a trigger based on the transmission power.
As an additional remark, if the sign of the feedback control is inverted, the cavity locks on the side lobe of the transmission peak (Fig. 5).
The reason why this control point is slightly shifted from the sideband resonance frequencies (carrier resonance frequency ± 0.32 MHz) is presumably that the carrier light acting as the local oscillator is located on the side lobe of its resonance, introducing an additional phase shift and effectively changing the optimal demodulation phase.

Images attached to this report
CAL (YPcal)
dan.chen - 16:11 Thursday 21 May 2026 (36940) Print this report
Installation of a new Pcal-Y laser unit near the Tx module

[Yu, Shingo, Dan]

Summary

We installed the new laser unit in the rack near the Pcal-Y Tx module. A shelf was first mounted in the rack to support the installation work, and then the laser unit was fixed in place. No power-on test or functional test was performed today.

Work details

Today, we installed a new laser unit in the rack near the Pcal-Y Tx module.
Before installing the laser unit, we mounted one shelf in the rack. This shelf was added to make the installation easier and to support the laser unit during the work.
After preparing the shelf, we placed the laser unit in the rack and fixed it mechanically.

Current status

Today's work was limited to fixing the laser unit in the rack. We did not perform any power-on test or other operational checks.
The laser head has not yet been installed in its final position and is still placed on top of the laser unit.

Images attached to this report
CAL (XPcal)
dan.chen - 16:02 Thursday 21 May 2026 (36939) Print this report
Test of QPD-based Pcal beam position monitoring at Rx module

[Yu, Hido, Dan]

Summary

We tested whether a QPD placed behind the steering mirror in the Pcal Rx module can be used to monitor the Pcal beam position. The transmitted laser power behind the steering mirrors was measured to be ~0.7 mW, which is consistent with the expected order assuming less than 0.1% transmission. A QPD signal response was observed when the ETMX TM Y setpoint was changed.

Background

During O4, the Pcal beam position was found to move over time. During weekly maintenance, we checked the beam position using the Tcam, and if the displacement was too large, the beam alignment was recovered using the pico-motors.

The Pcal beam position is the second largest factor contributing to the Pcal uncertainty. Proper treatment of the Pcal beam position is also one of the characteristic points of the KAGRA Pcal system. Therefore, we are trying to develop a beam position monitoring system. Ideally, we would like to monitor position changes of about ~+/-2 mm at the Rx side, which are difficult to detect clearly with the Tcam.
Also if we have this system, we can alwasy monitor it even during the IFO lock.

Purpose of today's work

  • Check whether it is realistic to place a QPD behind the steering mirror in the Rx module.
  • Measure the transmitted laser power through the steering mirror.
  • Place a QPD and check whether the QPD signal responds when the ETMX TM Y setpoint is changed.

Power measurement behind the Rx module

We measured the laser power behind the steering mirrors in the Rx module using a power meter.

  • Path 2, right side: 0.78 mW
  • Path 1, left side: 0.67 mW

These values are consistent with the expected order. Since the input laser power is about 1 W, 0.1% transmission would correspond to about 1 mW. However, 0.1% is the upper limit from the mirror specification, so a smaller transmitted power is reasonable.

The measured values will be used as a reference for designing the QPD setup to be installed.

QPD test

We placed a QPD(PDQ80A) behind the Path 1 steering mirror. The signal was acquired using a KPA101.

We changed the ETMX TM Y setpoint as follows[urad]: -7.4 -> +20 -> -20 -> -7.4

The QPD output at the Rx module changed approximately as follows:

(X, Y) = (0, +0.1) -> (-0.6, -0.6) -> (+0.1, 0) -> (0, +0.1)

We confirmed that the QPD output changes in response to the motion of the TM.

In this test, no lens was placed in front of the QPD. Since the beam diameter is large, about 10 mm, it may be necessary to place a lens before the QPD in the final setup.

Due to limited time, today's test was limited to confirming that the QPD output responds to the TM motion even without a lens.

Conclusion

The transmitted power behind the Rx steering mirrors was measured and found to be reasonable. The QPD signal also showed a response to the ETMX TM Y motion. This result suggests that a QPD-based monitoring system behind the Rx steering mirror is a realistic option for monitoring Pcal beam position changes. Further work is needed to design the final QPD setup, including the possible use of a lens.

MIF (General)
satoru.takano - 11:53 Thursday 21 May 2026 (36937) Print this report
Laser frequency noise induced by IMC suspensions

Summary

The estimated frequency noise induced by IMC suspensions is ~1 MHz peak-to-peak, which is inconsistent with the observed fluctuation of the beat note with the auxiliary laser. Other sources are suspicious.

Detail

During the PLL work, we have a feeling that it is hard to grab the linear range of the PLL signal because the beat note fluctuates a lot. Without anything, it moves O(MHz) in ten seconds and sometimes we saw a big jump in ~ 5 MHz. The error signal was almost always just white noise, and it seemed to be available for only a tiny moment (< 1 sec, ~ 0.1 sec?). We suspected that this fluctuation came from the main laser, because in these frequencies it follows IMC length and there are many resonant peaks of the IMC suspensions.

To verify this theory, I investigated the frequency noise using the calibrated channel: K1:CAL-CS_PROC_IMC_FREQUENCY is calibrated for the laser frequency fluctuation (up to a few kHz, according to Yamamoto-san). When IMC was locked to the laser frequency, I measured the PSD as attached, which indicates an RMS laser frequency fluctuation of ~160 kHz. Multiplying by a factor of 6, the peak-to-peak value of the fluctuation is ~ 1 MHz. This implies that other noise sources contribute to the beat note fluctuations. One possibility is phase noise induced by the suspensions, like the green lasers.

Notes

I also measured the PSD of the channel when MCL control was turned on after IMC was locked, i.e. both the laser frequency and MCL control were engaged. The RMS value was reduced to 11 kHz. But I'm not sure whether this value is an underestimation of the laser frequency fluctuation

 

Images attached to this report
MIF (ITF Control)
satoru.takano - 9:45 Thursday 21 May 2026 (36935) Print this report
Strange offset in POP17 for locking SRY

I noticed a strange offset in POP17I used for locking SRY, as shown in the attached. It changed from -0.93 to 0.86 while SRY was freely swinging, so it was slightly off-centred. When locking the SRY using it, AS DC power increased to 0.005, while the maximum power when freely swinging was 0.007. It reached the maximum value when an offset was added to the error signal and it was locked around 0.17, not 0. Probably related to this offset, ADS didn't work well; when it was engaged after locking SRY without any offset on the error signal, AS DC power stayed the same, and nothing changed after tuning the offset.

Last week, we didn't see such an offset; SRY was locked to the carrier resonance without any offset tuning, and ADS seemed to work well. We need further investigation for stable locking of DRMI.

Images attached to this report
Comments to this report:
satoru.takano - 8:16 Friday 22 May 2026 (36944) Print this report

We confirmed that this offset disappeared when ITMX was in MISALIGNED_BF state. For SRM alignment using SRX or SRY, we should misalign ITMY or ITMX by MISALIGNED_BF, not MISALIGNED.

MIF (ITF Control)
kenta.tanaka - 8:52 Thursday 21 May 2026 (36936) Print this report
Comment to Further investigation of carrier buildup/reduction in SRY (36891)

Sorry, I forgot to attach the figure 1.

Images attached to this comment
MIF (General)
dan.chen - 7:00 Thursday 21 May 2026 (36934) Print this report
Initial alignment

With Shingo Hido

Summary

We performed initial alignment for XARM, YARM, and OMC using the initial alignment guardian. XARM was aligned only with ADS, while YARM required a small BS adjustment. We also confirmed the IR beam on the OMMT2 trans QPD and checked the SRC flash.

Details

Preparation

PRM was changed to MISALIGNED. SRM was already in MISALIGNED. We briefly changed SRM to ALIGNED and confirmed that the SRC flash was visible, then returned it to MISALIGNED. (fig_001)

Initial Alignment

We confirmed that FIB and PNC were locked as expected, and opened all laser shutters.

For XARM, IRX_LOCKED and GRX_LOCKED_WITH_IRX were achieved. Then we requested ALIGNING_XARM. No manual adjustment was needed, and the alignment was done only by ADS. We then recorded the good values and offloaded the alignment.

For YARM, IRY_LOCKED and GRY_LOCKED_WITH_IRY were achieved. During ALIGNING_YARM, we adjusted BS from (P, Y) = (9.6, -39.3) to (8.6, -38.3). We then recorded the good values and offloaded the alignment.

OMC

We followed the procedure in klog36759. PRM was changed to MISALIGNED_BF, and the GRX and GRY shutters were closed.

We tweaked the OMMT1 angle using coil-magnet actuators to adjusted the beam on the OMMT2 trans QPD. The OMMT1 TM OPTICALIGN was changed from (P, Y) = (-22800, -4200) to (-24000, -4400). The QPD sum was about 8.5.

OSTM was changed to MISALIGNED_FOR_LOCK_ACQ to avoid unnecessary OMC flashes. We then increased the laser power by rotating the PSL HWP from 151 deg to 162 deg, and then returned it to 151 deg. (fig_002) The IR laser power was therefore restored to the original 1 W. The beam on the QPD was confirmed to be the IR beam.

Recovery

OSTM was returned to LOCK_ACQUISITION. We also checked the SRC flash by setting only ITMY to LOCK_ACQUISITION among Type-A suspensions, keeping the others MISALIGNED, and changing SRM to ALIGNED. The SRC flash was confirmed, and SRM was returned to MISALIGNED. (fig_003)

Finally, PRM was returned to LOCK_ACQUISITION.

Images attached to this report
MIF (ITF Control)
Seidai Kawakami - 19:37 Wednesday 20 May 2026 (36931) Print this report
Comment to SRM OPLEV QPD Centering (36880)

[Kawakami, Hasegawa, Abe, Tanaka, Fujimoto]

Summary

We adjusted position of LEN QPD. In the result, coupling from yaw motion to LEN sensor was reduced.

Details

We measured spectrum of the SRM OPLEV QPDs with covers but the coupling from yaw motion to LEN sensor became worse comparing with the no cover case.

Therefore we adjusted position of a QPD which measures LEN in order to reduce coupling. 

A 10 Hz sinusodial excitation(gain: 3000) was applied to the SRM in the yaw direction, and the micrometer controlling the longitudinal position of the LEN QPD was adjusted.
Subsequetly, the specra of the LEN and TILT QPDs were measured.
During the measurement, the centering of the LEN QPD drifted, so it was readjusted as neccesary.

When the micrometer was moved in the direction that reduced the coupling, it reached the limit of its range of motion. The spectrum of LEN Horizontal obtained at that point is shown by the red solid line in Fig.1.
As the result, the coupling improved compared with that before adjusting the LEN position. However, it could not be improved beyond the result obtained on May 13th.

A 10 Hz sinusodial excitation(gain: 30000) was applied to the SRM in the direction along with laser. The spectrum obtained at that point is shown by Fig.2.
In the result, a peak on 10 Hz appeared in the LEN and TILT VER (Fig.2 on the lower side) which can be regarded as a reasonable result. 
Otherwise, the value of a peak in the LEN and TILT HOR (Fig.2 on the upper side) is close to the noise floor.

SRM OPLEV is ready to use.

Images attached to this comment
MIF (ITF Control)
Hiroki Fujimoto - 19:13 Wednesday 20 May 2026 (36929) Print this report
Comment to SRM OPLEV QPD Centering (36880)

[Kawakami, Hasegawa, Abe, Tanaka, Fujimoto]

Summary

For the SRM OPLEV LEN QPD whose mount had been modified yesterday, we restored the mount to its original configuration, installed the LEN QPD cover, and reinstalled the QPD on the OPLEV table.

Details

During yesterday’s installation of covers onto the SRM OPLEV QPDs, it was found that the mounting structure of the LEN QPD differed from that of the TILT QPD, preventing installation of the cover onto the LEN QPD.
Therefore, modification of the LEN QPD mount had been necessary.
However, it was later pointed out that a dedicated cover for the LEN QPD existed.
After searching in the mine, we found the LEN QPD cover on a shelf along the IMC.
Therefore, the mount modified yesterday was restored to its original configuration, and the dedicated LEN QPD cover was installed.

Fig. 1 shows the modified LEN QPD (right) and the unused QPD left on the POS table (left), after yesterday’s exchange of the (adjustment stage + mount) assemblies.
The exchanged assemblies were swapped back again, restoring their original configuration, as shown in Fig. 2.
This also restored the longitudinal adjustment capability of the LEN QPD.

Fig. 3 shows the photo of the layout after installing the LEN QPD onto the OPLEV table and attached the cover.
The LEN QPD was installed at a position 273 mm away from the folding mirror so that its position remained unchanged from the previous setup.

Images attached to this comment
MIF (ITF Control)
kenta.tanaka - 19:13 Wednesday 20 May 2026 (36932) Print this report
Comment to Further investigation of carrier buildup/reduction in SRY (36891)

We found that PRM misalignment state when REFL power bulidup was measured on May 13th, 2026 (klog36922) was differ from the state when the power was measured on May 19th, 2026 (klog36891).

Fig. 1 shows the timeseries the power on AS, REFL, and POP PDs, and the guardian state numbers of ITMX and PRM. Left panel shows them on May 19th and right panel shows them on May 13th. According to this figure, the following table is summarized the relation between the states and the REFL build up ratio.

  May 13th May 19th
ITMX state MISALIGNED (1400) MISALIGNED_BF (1600)
PRM state MISALIGNED_BF (1600) MISALIGNED (1400)
REFL buildup ratio 5.0 3.4

So one of possibilities why the REFL power buildup becomes low is that PRM misalignment angle in the MISALIGNED state is also not enough. 

MIF (ITF Control)
tomotada.akutsu - 11:56 Wednesday 20 May 2026 (36927) Print this report
Comment to SRM OPLEV QPD Centering (36880)

I have asked engineers in NAOJ/ATC for the latest 3D data of each QPD cover, and uploaded them to JGWdoc.

MIF (ITF Control)
tomotada.akutsu - 8:25 Wednesday 20 May 2026 (36926) Print this report
Comment to SRM OPLEV QPD Centering (36880)

There should be the QPD covers for the length QPD setups. According to my e-mail records, the products arrived at Kamioka on Oct 12 2022.

CAL (Pcal general)
dan.chen - 6:30 Wednesday 20 May 2026 (36925) Print this report
Pcal beam position check

Yesterday, I took TCam images for the Pcal beam position estimation for the first time in about one month. During this work, the TM reference position used in the image analysis was also adjusted.

Adjustment of TM reference position

  • Pcal-X: The TM reference position was changed from (1942, 1410) to (1958, 1410). This corresponds to a displacement of (+16, 0) pixels, or approximately (+1.4, 0) mm.
  • Pcal-Y: The TM reference position was changed from (2250, 1000) to (2250, 1010). This corresponds to a displacement of (0, +10) pixels, or approximately (0, +0.9) mm.

Discussion

Compared with the images taken about one month ago, the TM reference position changed by about 1 mm. On the other hand, the estimated Pcal beam positions showed little change and remained stable within approximately 1 mm.

Images attached to this report
MIF (General)
dan.chen - 5:59 Wednesday 20 May 2026 (36924) Print this report
Initial alignment

Initial alignment was performed for XARM, YARM, and OMC. XARM and YARM alignment were completed using the initial alignment guardian. For OMC, the procedure in klog36759 was followed.
After the work, I conformed SRC flash with aligned SRM and ITMY.

Attached figure is the flash after the initial alignment works.

Images attached to this report
MIF (ITF Control)
Hiroki Fujimoto - 1:13 Wednesday 20 May 2026 (36922) Print this report
Comment to Further investigation of carrier buildup/reduction in SRY (36891)

[Kawakami, Hasegawa, Abe, Tanaka, Fujimoto]

Summary

In the SRY carrier buildup measurement, improvement of the carrier buildup factor at some transmission ports was observed by applying a larger misalignment to IX than before.
The results are summarized below:

Carrier build up factor

ITMX MISALIGNED
(klog #36891)

ITMX MISALIGNED_BF
(this measurement)

REFL 5.0 3.4
POP 1.3 3.6
POS 1.6 NA
AS 5.0 6.5

We believe that the improvements at POP and AS were caused by reducing the amount of IX-reflected light entering the POP and AS ports by increasing the IX misalignment.
On the other hand, the carrier buildup at REFL became worse for an unknown reason.

Details

Regarding the issue that the beam from IFO split into two beams on the POS table (under the condition: IY aligned, IX misaligned, SRM misaligned), it was found that the IX misalignment had been insufficient, and the light reflected by IX was reaching the POS table (klog #36913,klog #36916).
One possible explanation for why the SRY carrier buildup factors at the four transmission ports (REFL, POP, POS, AS) had not reached the design value of 7.3 is that the beam reflected by the misaligned IX entered the PDs of each transmission port and acted as an optical offset.

Therefore, we investigated whether the carrier buildup could be improved by using ITMX MISALIGNED_BF, i.e., applying a larger misalignment to IX to prevent contamination from the reflected beam.
This measurement was carried out opportunistically during the SRM QPD centering work (klog #36921), when we had a chance to align the SRY and observe flashes.

Fig. 1 shows the time-series data of SRY flashes observed at each PD.
The resulting carrier buildup factors are:

Carrier build up factor

ITMX MISALIGNED
(klog #36891)

ITMX MISALIGNED_BF
(this measurement)

REFL 5.0 3.4
POP 1.3 3.6
POS 1.6 NA
AS 5.0 6.5

Comparing Fig. 1 with the previous flash data (Fig. 1 in klog #36891), the off-resonance power level at AS and POP became lower.
This indicates that increasing the IX misalignment successfully reduced contamination from IX-reflected light, and the carrier buildup factor indeed improved.

On the other hand, at REFL, the off-resonance power level unexpectedly increased compared to the previous measurement, resulting in a lower carrier buildup factor.
It is possible that the IX-reflected beam in the MISALIGNED_BF configuration entered the PD through some unexpected path, but the cause is currently unknown.

In addition, even for the improved POP and AS ports, the measured buildup factors are still below the design value: 7.3, so further investigation is necessary, although we think the priority not so high.

Images attached to this comment
MIF (ITF Control)
Hiroki Fujimoto - 21:51 Tuesday 19 May 2026 (36921) Print this report
Comment to SRM OPLEV QPD Centering (36880)

[Kawakami, Hasegawa, Abe, Tanaka, Fujimoto]

Summary

We installed QPD covers (metal cover + IR-cut filter) on the SRM OPLEV QPDs, rearranged the optical layout accordingly, and measured the tilt coupling to LEN QPD.

By installing the appropriate IR-cut filters, the incident power of the OPLEV beam increased, improving the sensing noise by approximately a factor of 2.5.
However, due to an unfavorable installation position of the LEN QPD, the coupling of the SRM tilt motion became approximately three times worse than in the previous setup.

Tomorrow, we plan to adjust the LEN QPD position to reduce the tilt coupling.

Documents on QPD cover

Metal cover:  
https://gwdoc.icrr.u-tokyo.ac.jp/cgi-bin/private/DocDB/ShowDocument?docid=13597

IR-cut filter (Dichroic filter):  
https://gwdoc.icrr.u-tokyo.ac.jp/cgi-bin/private/DocDB/ShowDocument?docid=13690

Installation of QPD covers

During the previous SRM OPLEV QPD centering work (klog #36880), it was pointed out that the QPD covers (metal covers + IR-cut filters) had not yet been installed. Therefore, we performed the installation this time.
Since the QPD covers have a thickness, installing them directly onto the previously constructed OPLEV optical setup would block part of the beam path.
Therefore, the optical layout was rearranged and the QPD covers were installed following the procedure below.

Replacement of LEN QPD lens and mount

In the previous LEN QPD path, a lens (f=300mm) for suppressing TILT coupling was installed using a relatively large lens mount with vertical/horizontal adjustment mechanisms.
To secure sufficient space for the beam path, the mount was replaced with a smaller one.
During the replacement work, we also found many contaminations and scratches on the lens.
Therefore, the lens was replaced with a new lens (LB1779-B) found on the shelf along the IMC.

Installation of QPD covers

The QPD covers (metal covers + IR-cut filters) were installed.
Installation onto the TILT QPD was completed without issue.
However, for the LEN QPD, the circuit board was fixed lower within the mount, causing the QPD cover to mechanically interfere with the mount.
Therefore, the cover could not be installed as-is and we needed some modifications.

In Fig. 1, the QPD on the right is the LEN QPD, while the one on the left is a QPD left on the POS table.
Compared with the QPD on the left, which can accept the cover, the LEN QPD on the right has a different relative position between the circuit board and the metal plate behind it.
This is presumably because the LEN QPD has a longitudinal adjustment micro-stage, and the board position was lowered to compensate for the increased height of the photosensitive surface.
Therefore, we swapped the (adjustment stage + mount) assemblies between the unused POS-table QPD and the LEN QPD so that the LEN QPD could accept the cover.

In Fig. 2, the right side shows the LEN QPD after the swap, while the left side shows the unused POS-table QPD after the swap.

Please note that, due to this swap, the LEN QPD temporarily lost its longitudinal adjustment micro-stage.

Installation and centering of the lens and QPDs

Fig. 3 shows the optical setup after installation of the lens, TILT QPD, and LEN QPD.
With the SRM aligned and SRC flashes visible, the TILT QPD and LEN QPD were centered using their micro-stages.

The resulting QPD sum signals are:

  • TILT QPD sum: 223 counts  
  • LEN QPD sum: 289 counts

Before installation of the QPD covers, the values were 90.5 counts and 130 counts, respectively (klog #36885).
Thus, the incident power increased by factors of approximately 2.5 and 2.2, respectively.
We believe this is because the previously used mysterious square filter (KG5 glass?) blocked not only IR light but also part of the OPLEV beam.

Check of tilt coupling into LEN OPLEV

To evaluate the tilt coupling into the LEN QPD, the SRM was excited in yaw at 10 Hz with the same amplitude as used in the previous measurement (klog #36885), while measuring the QPD spectra.

Fig. 4 shows the measured spectra, and Fig. 5 shows the injected signal configuration.

First,

  • Green: current TILT QPD horizontal signal
  • Cyan: previous TILT QPD horizontal signal

show nearly identical peak heights.

On the other hand,

  • Red: current LEN QPD horizontal signal
  • Orange: previous LEN QPD horizontal signal

show that the coupling became approximately three times worse.
We believe this is because the distances among the SRM, lens, and LEN QPD changed in this reinstallation of the lens and LEN QPD.

Although unrelated to the coupling itself, comparison of the noise floors in Fig. 4 shows that the noise floor improved by approximately a factor of 2.5 after the installation, which is consistent with the increase in incident optical power onto the QPDs.

Plan for tomorrow

To reduce the LEN QPD tilt coupling to the previous level or below, we plan to adjust the longitudinal position of the LEN OPLEV setup.
Since the LEN QPD currently lacks the longitudinal adjustment micro-stage due to the assembly swap described above, we first plan to reinstall the longitudinal micro-stage and then perform the position adjustment.

Images attached to this comment
MIF (General)
shun.saito - 18:13 Tuesday 19 May 2026 (36919) Print this report
Comment to PLL lock trial after removing the suspected ITMX beam (36916)
  • When ITMX was set to MISALIGNED_BF, the beam appeared as shown in Photo 1.

 

  • The beat signal appeared as shown in Photo 2.

 

  • After closing the control loop, the beat signal changed as shown in Photo 3.
Images attached to this comment
MIF (General)
dan.chen - 17:31 Tuesday 19 May 2026 (36916) Print this report
PLL lock trial after removing the suspected ITMX beam

[Saito, Takano, Dan]

Background

In the previous investigation, two beams were observed on the beam profiler. One of them was suspected to be a beam coming from ITMX. Therefore, we decided to largely misalign ITMX in order to remove this beam and then try the PLL control using the remaining beam.

Recovery of the previous condition

First, we restored the setup to the same condition as last Friday. The situation was successfully reproduced, and two beam spots were observed again on the beam profiler.

Misalignment of ITMX

ITMX was set to MISALIGNED_BF. After this operation, the beam spot located in the lower part of the beam profiler image moved and disappeared from the beam profiler screen. A screenshot was taken at this point.

This result suggests that the disappeared beam was likely associated with ITMX, and that the remaining visible beam was mainly the beam from ITMY.

PLL control trial

We then tried to control the auxiliary laser frequency with a PLL. The auxiliary laser beam and the interferometer laser beam were overlapped on a PD, and the beat signal was detected. The beat signal was mixed with a 75 MHz LO signal. After passing through low-pass filters of 100 kHz and 1 MHz, the signal was used as the error signal for the PLL control.

The beat frequency was fluctuating significantly, by several MHz to more than 10 MHz. The control filter was implemented using MokuLab. At this stage, the filter was just a flat gain.

When the control loop was closed, the beat signal became much broader in the frequency domain, and its sharpness was significantly degraded. This suggests that the feedback control was probably not working as intended. Instead, noise was likely injected into the auxiliary laser frequency through the PZT actuator, which contaminated the beat signal.

Control loop configuration

The control loop used in this trial was:

RFPD  -> Mixer with 75 MHz LO  -> 100 kHz LPF  -> 1 MHz LPF  -> MokuLab, gain only  -> SR560, for range expansion  -> Auxiliary laser PZT

Summary

  • The previous two-beam condition was reproduced.
  • After setting ITMX to MISALIGNED_BF, one beam spot disappeared.
  • PLL control was attempted using the beat signal, but we could not close the loop.
  • The loop likely injected noise into the auxiliary laser frequency rather than stabilizing it.
Comments to this report:
shun.saito - 18:13 Tuesday 19 May 2026 (36919) Print this report
  • When ITMX was set to MISALIGNED_BF, the beam appeared as shown in Photo 1.

 

  • The beat signal appeared as shown in Photo 2.

 

  • After closing the control loop, the beat signal changed as shown in Photo 3.
Images attached to this comment
VAC (Valves & Pumps)
nobuhiro.kimura - 15:10 Tuesday 19 May 2026 (36915) Print this report
#39 Error message on the ion pump power supply

[Kimura, Yasui]

 On May 18, during a routine inspection, Masahiro Takahashi reported that the #39 ion pump power supply had stopped operating and was displaying “Error 20.”
The content of the displayed Error 20 is: “HV interlock not satisfied or HV switch is off. HV cannot run. See section on digital inputs for details.”
After confirming that there were no signs of arcing at the high-voltage cable connections and other parts of the ion pump power supply, the unit was restarted, and it was confirmed that it could operate without any issues.
As a precaution, a spare ion pump power supply and high-voltage cable were temporarily placed near the #39 ion pump power supply to serve as replacements in the event that the unit malfunctions again.

Images attached to this report
MIF (General)
dan.chen - 8:22 Tuesday 19 May 2026 (36914) Print this report
Initial alignment

With Shingo Hido

Summary

Initial alignment was performed for XARM, YARM, and OMC. XARM and YARM alignment were completed using the initial alignment guardian. For OMC, the procedure in klog36759 was followed.

Details

SRM

SRM was kept in the MISALIGNED state. We confirmed that the POP RF17 signal changed as expected when switching between ALIGNED and MISALIGNED, so we used the implemented MISALIGNED state reported in klog36903.

XARM

We first confirmed that the Type-A suspensions could go to LOCK_ACQUISITION. Then we started the XARM initial alignment using the guardian.
IRX_LOCKED and GRX_LOCKED_WITH_IRX were achieved, although the lock was not very stable at first. We adjusted PR3 OPTICALIGN from (P, Y) = (55.4, -18.7) to (54.6, -20.6), and the IR transmission increased from about 0.3 to about 0.6.
During ALIGNING_XARM, ADS was engaged for IMMT2, PR2, and PR3. We also slightly adjusted ITMX and ETMX from (ITMX P, Y), (ETMX P, Y) = (3.5, -11.9), (-6.7, -7.5) to (3.5, -12.7), (-6.7, -7.1). Then we recorded the good values and offloaded.

YARM

IRY_LOCKED was achieved. GRY_LOCKED_WITH_IRY was also achieved.
During ALIGNING_YARM, ADS was engaged for ETMY, ITMY, and SR3. We moved BS to adjust the beam position on ETMY from (P, Y) = (8.5, -39.1) to (8.2, -39.6). Then we recorded the good values and offloaded.

OMC

We followed the procedure in klog36759. PRM was changed to MISALIGNED_BF, and the GRX and GRY shutters were closed. Then we tweaked OMMT1 using coil-magnet actuators to center the beam on the OMMT2 trans QPD: (P, Y) = (-22000, -4000) to (-24000, -4300).
OSTM was changed to MISALIGNED_FOR_LOCK_ACQ to avoid unnecessary OMC flashes. We then increased the laser power by rotating the PSL HWP from 150 deg to 162 deg. The beam seen on the QPD was likely the IR beam, although the signal level seemed somewhat low.

Recovery

  • PSL HWP was returned to 150 deg.
  • OSTM was returned to LOCK_ACQUISITION.
  • PRM was returned to MISALIGNED.
  • SRM was left in MISALIGNED.
  • GRX and GRY shutters were left in open.
MIF (General)
satoru.takano - 8:16 Tuesday 19 May 2026 (36913) Print this report
The current misalignment is insufficient to separate the beams on POS table

[Saito, Fujimoto, Takano]

Summary

The beam separation is estimated when one of the ITMs is misaligned, and it was found that the current misalignment of the ITMs is insufficient to separate the beam on the POS table.

Detail

We observed a strange beam shape on the POS table during PRCL/SRCL measurement work. It was pointed out that the misalignment angle of the ITM, which was not used for SRC, was insufficient, and that the ghost beam from the misaligned ITM also reached the POS table.

We investigated how much the ghost beam would be separated with the current misalignment. The parameters we used are as follows:

  • ITM misalignment: value difference in the TM oplev before and after we requested 'MISALIGNED' state
    • ITMX: 100 µrad
    • ITMY: 58 µrad
  • Distance from SR2 transmission to the edge of the POS table: 2 m (estimated roughly from this schematic)
  • The position of a lens with a focal length of 500mm: 515 mm
  • Other distance and optics parameters: here

For simplicity, we assumed that only ITM is misaligned, while the other mirrors are perfectly aligned. The expected trace is shown in Fig. 1 and 2 (w/o the beam radius) and Fig. 3 and 4 (w/ the beam radius). Fig. 5 shows the position where we saw the beam shape with the beam profiler. The beam trace shows that the beam separation is almost zero at the 1st lens on the POS table, and the two beams look separated around the waist after the lens. The estimate here is highly uncertain, but the result is qualitatively reasonable.

To avoid the ghost beam reaching the POS table, we need to misalign the ITMs by more than 300 urad, which is difficult with the current misalignment method (tilting on MN); misalignment by upper stages (BF) is better for our purpose.

Images attached to this report
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