[Smith, Hirose, Fujimoto, Saito]
The 20 dB attenuator placed before the SR560 input was removed, and the SR560 gain was increased to 2000. In addition, a Moku:Lab was inserted before the SR560, and an integrator with a cutoff frequency of 100 Hz was added. Measurement of the open-loop transfer function showed that the UGF was approximately 2 kHz. With the cutoff frequency of the high-pass filter in the SR560 used for the OMC REFL PD signal set to 300 Hz, SRY flashes were observed when the LO frequency was modulated by ±2 MHz at a modulation rate of 300 Hz. Furthermore, SRY flashes were also observed when the cutoff frequency of the SR560 high-pass filter was changed to 100 Hz and the modulation rate was reduced to 100 Hz. However, the noise level was higher than in the 300 Hz cutoff-frequency case.
- First, as in the previous experiment (klog:37123), the PLL was locked using only the SR560 by configuring it as a first-order low-pass filter with a cutoff frequency of 1 Hz and a gain of 200. The open-loop transfer function was then measured, yielding a UGF of approximately 2.5 Hz (Fig. 1). The reason why the UGF decreased compared with the previous result (klog:37123) is unclear. Next, the 20 dB attenuator before the SR560 input was removed, and the SR560 gain was increased to 2000. Measurement of the open-loop transfer function under these conditions showed a UGF of approximately 2 kHz. The corresponding open-loop transfer function is shown by the light orange trace in Fig. 2. Subsequently, a Moku:Lab was inserted before the SR560, and an integrator with a cutoff frequency of 100 Hz was added. The measured open-loop transfer function again showed a UGF of approximately 2 kHz. The corresponding transfer function is shown by the orange trace in Fig. 2.
- Next, while attempting to scan the SRY, it was noticed that the DC signal from the OMC REFL PD was approximately -300 counts. When the light incident on the PD was blocked using a sensor card, the signal returned to approximately 0 counts (Fig. 3). The reason for the offset of approximately -300 counts remains unknown.
- Next, a 1 Vpp sinusoidal signal generated by the Moku:Lab function generator was used to modulate the LO frequency. The LO frequency was first set equal to the beat frequency and then frequency-modulated by ±2 MHz at a modulation rate of 300 Hz. Under these conditions, with the cutoff frequency of the SR560 high-pass filter used for the OMC REFL PD signal set to 300 Hz, four peaks were observed within one 300 Hz modulation cycle (Fig. 4). Since the FSR of the cavity is approximately 2.2 MHz, these peaks are believed to correspond to SRY flashes. Furthermore, when the modulation rate was reduced to 100 Hz and the cutoff frequency of the SR560 high-pass filter was also reduced to 100 Hz, four peaks were again observed within one 100 Hz modulation cycle (Fig. 5). However, the noise level was higher than in the case with the 300 Hz cutoff frequency.