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Featured researches published by K. Craig.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2014

Low temperature mechanical dissipation of an ion-beam sputtered silica film

I. W. Martin; R. Nawrodt; K. Craig; C. Schwarz; R. Bassiri; G. M. Harry; J. Hough; S. Penn; S. Reid; R. Robie; S. Rowan

Thermal noise arising from mechanical dissipation in oxide mirror coatings is an important limit to the sensitivity of future gravitational wave detectors, optical atomic clocks and other precision measurement systems. Here, we present measurements of the temperature dependence of the mechanical dissipation of an ion-beam sputtered silica film between 10 and 300 K. A dissipation peak was observed at 20 K and the low temperature dissipation was found to have significantly different characteristics than observed for bulk silica and silica films deposited by alternative techniques. These results are important for better understanding the underlying mechanisms of mechanical dissipation, and thus thermal noise, in the most commonly-used reflective coatings for precision measurements.


Optics Letters | 2013

Cryogenic measurements of mechanical loss of high-reflectivity coating and estimation of thermal noise

M. Granata; K. Craig; G. Cagnoli; Cécile Carcy; W. Cunningham; J. Degallaix; R. Flaminio; Danièle Forest; M. J. Hart; J. Hennig; J. Hough; Ian MacLaren; I. W. Martin; C. Michel; N. Morgado; Salim Otmani; L. Pinard; S. Rowan

We report on low-frequency measurements of the mechanical loss of a high-quality (transmissivity T<5 ppm at λ(0)=1064 nm, absorption loss <0.5 ppm) multilayer dielectric coating of ion-beam-sputtered fused silica and titanium-doped tantala in the 10-300 K temperature range. A useful parameter for the computation of coating thermal noise on different substrates is derived as a function of temperature and frequency.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2015

Measurement of the mechanical loss of prototype GaP/AlGaP crystalline coatings for future gravitational wave detectors

A. Cumming; K. Craig; I. W. Martin; R. Bassiri; L. Cunningham; M. M. Fejer; James S. Harris; K. Haughian; D. Heinert; B. Lantz; Angie Lin; A. Markosyan; R. Nawrodt; R. Route; S. Rowan

Thermal noise associated with the dielectric optical coatings used to form the mirrors of interferometric gravitational wave detectors is expected to be an important limit to the sensitivity of future detectors. Improvements in detector performance are likely to require coating materials of lower mechanical dissipation. Typically, current coatings use multiple alternating layers of ion-beam-sputtered amorphous silica and tantalum pentoxide (doped with titania). We present here measurements of the mechanical dissipation of promising alternative crystalline coatings that use multi-layers of single crystal gallium phosphide (GaP) and aluminium gallium phosphide (AlGaP) that are epitaxially grown and lattice matched to a silicon substrate. Analysis shows that the dissipation of the crystalline coating materials appears to be significantly lower than that of the currently used amorphous coatings, potentially enabling a reduction of coating thermal noise in future gravitational wave detectors.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2015

Low-temperature mechanical dissipation of thermally evaporated indium film for use in interferometric gravitational wave detectors

P. G. Murray; I. W. Martin; L. Cunningham; K. Craig; G. Hammond; Gerd Hofmann; J. Hough; R. Nawrodt; David Reifert; S. Rowan

Indium bonding is under consideration for use in the construction of cryogenic mirror suspensions in future gravitational wave detectors. This paper presents measurements of the mechanical loss of a thermally evaporated indium film over a broad range of frequencies and temperatures. It provides an estimate of the resulting thermal noise at 20 K for a typical test mass geometry for a cryogenic interferometric gravitational wave detector from an indium layer between suspension elements.


Optical Interference Coatings (2013), paper MA.2 | 2013

Epitaxial integration of monocrystalline III-V coatings on silicon for thermal noise reduction

Angie Lin; R. Bassiri; K. Craig; A. Cumming; Martin M. Fejer; James S. Harris; K. Haughian; J. Hough; A. Markosyan; I. W. Martin; S. Reid; R. Route; S. Rowan

Direct epitaxial integration of crystalline AlGaP/GaP distributed Bragg reflectors on Si has much potential to reduce Brownian thermal noise in mirror coatings. Growth, characterization, and future prospects of these materials are discussed.


Physical Review D | 2014

Mechanical loss of a multilayer tantala/silica coating on a sapphire disk at cryogenic temperatures: Toward the KAGRA gravitational wave detector

E. Hirose; K. Craig; Hideki Ishitsuka; I. W. Martin; Norikatsu Mio; Shigenori Moriwaki; P. G. Murray; Masatake Ohashi; S. Rowan; Yusuke Sakakibara; Toshikazu Suzuki; Kouichi Waseda; Kyohei Watanabe; Kazuhiro Yamamoto


Physical Review D | 2015

Ion-beam sputtered amorphous silicon films for cryogenic precision measurement systems

P. G. Murray; I. W. Martin; K. Craig; J. Hough; R. Robie; S. Rowan; Matt R. Abernathy; Teal Pershing; S. Penn


Physical Review D | 2014

Thermal noise of folding mirrors

D. Heinert; K. Craig; H. Grote; S. Hild; H. Lück; R. Nawrodt; D. Simakov; S. P. Vyatchanin; H. Wittel


Physical Review D | 2017

Cryogenic mechanical loss of a single-crystalline GaP coating layer for precision measurement applications

P. G. Murray; I. W. Martin; K. Craig; J. Hough; S. Rowan; R. Bassiri; Martin M. Fejer; James S. Harris; B. Lantz; Angie C. Lin; A. Markosyan; R. Route


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2017

Anomalous optical surface absorption in nominally pure silicon samples at 1550 nm

A. S. Bell; J. Steinlechner; I. W. Martin; K. Craig; W. Cunningham; S. Rowan; J. Hough; Roman Schnabel; A. Khalaidovski

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S. Rowan

University of Glasgow

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J. Hough

University of Glasgow

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