The Advanced Virgo gravitational wave detector aims at a sensitivity ten times better than the initial LIGO and Virgo detectors. This implies very stringent requirement on the optical losses in the interferometer arm cavities. In this paper we focus on the mirrors which form the interferometer arm cavities and that require a surface figure error to be well below one nanometre on a diameter of 150 mm. This 'sub-nanometric flatness' is not achievable by classical polishing on such a large diameter. Therefore we present the corrective coating technique which has been developed to reach this requirement. Its principle is to add a non-uniform thin film on top of the substrate in order to flatten its surface. In this paper we will introduce the A...
Several large-scale interferometric gravitational-wave detectors use resonant arm cavities to enhanc...
Imperfect cavity mirrors in the arms of an interferometric gravitational-wave (GW) detector can resu...
International audienceAn asymmetry in radii of curvature of the mirrors in the arms of an interferom...
The Advanced Virgo gravitational wave detector aims at a sensitivity ten times better than the initi...
The second generation of gravitational wave detectors will aim at improving by an order of magnitude...
présenté par A. RemillieuxLarge mirrors (350 mm), having extremely low optical loss (absorption, sca...
présentée par L. PinardThe goal of the VIRGO program is to build a giant Michelson type interferomet...
Gravitational waves have been predicted by Einstein in his General Relativity theory. They are pertu...
Large optical components (diameter 350 mm), having extremely low loss at 1064 nm, are needed for the...
Large optical components (diameter 350 mm), having extremely low loss at 1064 nm, are needed for the...
Large mirrors (∅350 mm) having extremely low optical loss (absorption, scattering, wavefront) were c...
Several large-scale interferometric gravitational-wave detectors use resonant arm cavities to enhanc...
Imperfect cavity mirrors in the arms of an interferometric gravitational-wave (GW) detector can resu...
International audienceAn asymmetry in radii of curvature of the mirrors in the arms of an interferom...
The Advanced Virgo gravitational wave detector aims at a sensitivity ten times better than the initi...
The second generation of gravitational wave detectors will aim at improving by an order of magnitude...
présenté par A. RemillieuxLarge mirrors (350 mm), having extremely low optical loss (absorption, sca...
présentée par L. PinardThe goal of the VIRGO program is to build a giant Michelson type interferomet...
Gravitational waves have been predicted by Einstein in his General Relativity theory. They are pertu...
Large optical components (diameter 350 mm), having extremely low loss at 1064 nm, are needed for the...
Large optical components (diameter 350 mm), having extremely low loss at 1064 nm, are needed for the...
Large mirrors (∅350 mm) having extremely low optical loss (absorption, scattering, wavefront) were c...
Several large-scale interferometric gravitational-wave detectors use resonant arm cavities to enhanc...
Imperfect cavity mirrors in the arms of an interferometric gravitational-wave (GW) detector can resu...
International audienceAn asymmetry in radii of curvature of the mirrors in the arms of an interferom...