S. Biscans
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by S. Biscans.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2015
F. Matichard; B. Lantz; R. Mittleman; K. Mason; J. S. Kissel; B. Abbott; S. Biscans; J. McIver; R. Abbott; S. Abbott; E. Allwine; S. Barnum; J. Birch; C. Celerier; Damon A. Clark; D. C. Coyne; D. DeBra; R. T. Derosa; M. Evans; S. Foley; P. Fritschel; J. A. Giaime; C. Gray; G. Grabeel; J. Hanson; C. Hardham; M. Hillard; W. Hua; C. Kucharczyk; M. Landry
The new generation of gravitational waves detectors require unprecedented levels of isolation from seismic noise. This article reviews the seismic isolation strategy and instrumentation developed for the Advanced LIGO observatories. It summarizes over a decade of research on active inertial isolation and shows the performance recently achieved at the Advanced LIGO observatories. The paper emphasizes the scientific and technical challenges of this endeavor and how they have been addressed. An overview of the isolation strategy is given. It combines multiple layers of passive and active inertial isolation to provide suitable rejection of seismic noise at all frequencies. A detailed presentation of the three active platforms that have been developed is given. They are the hydraulic pre-isolator, the single-stage internal isolator and the two-stage internal isolator. The architecture, instrumentation, control scheme and isolation results are presented for each of the three systems. Results show that the seismic isolation sub-system meets Advanced LIGOs stringent requirements and robustly supports the operation of the two detectors.
Physical Review D | 2015
B. Abbott; R. Abbott; T. D. Abbott; M. Abernathy; F. Acernese; K. Ackley; C. Adams; T. Adams; P. Addesso; R. Adhikari; V. B. Adya; C. Affeldt; M. Agathos; K. Agatsuma; N. Aggarwal; O. D. Aguiar; A. Ain; P. Ajith; B. Allen; A. Allocca; D. Amariutei; S. Anderson; W. G. Anderson; Koji Arai; M. C. Araya; C. C. Arceneaux; J. S. Areeda; N. Arnaud; K. G. Arun; G. Ashton
We present the results of a search for long-duration gravitational wave transients in two sets of data collected by the LIGO Hanford and LIGO Livingston detectors between November 5, 2005 and September 30, 2007, and July 7, 2009 and October 20, 2010, with a total observational time of 283.0 days and 132.9 days, respectively. The search targets gravitational wave transients of duration 10 - 500 seconds in a frequency band of 40 - 1000 Hz, with minimal assumptions about the signal waveform, polarization, source direction, or time of occurrence. All candidate triggers were consistent with the expected background; as a result we set 90% confidence upper limits on the rate of long-duration gravitational wave transients for different types of gravitational wave signals. We also report upper limits on the source rate density per year per Mpc^3 for specific signal models. These are the first results from an all-sky search for unmodeled long-duration transient gravitational waves.
ASME 2012 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference | 2012
F. Matichard; K. Mason; R. Mittleman; B. Lantz; Ben Abbott; M. MacInnis; Adrien LeRoux; Michael Hillard; Celine Ramet; S. Barnum; Andy Stein; S. Foley; H. Radkins; Jeff Kissel; S. Biscans; Vincent Lhuillier
The control bandwidth and performance of active vibration isolation systems are usually directly related to the system dynamic characteristics. In this paper, we present results from a 4 years study carried out to improve the dynamical response and control performance on the two-stage isolator designed for Advanced LIGO detectors. The paper will focus on the platform’s first stage to illustrate prototyping, optimization, final design and the experimental results obtained during this program. The system concept, architecture and prototype will be presented. The factors initially limiting the prototype’s performance will be analyzed. Solutions based on sensors relocation, payload reduction, structural stiffening and passive techniques to damp the residual high frequency flexible modes will be presented. Experimental results obtained with the prototype will be compared with the system’s final version. The series of improvement obtained help not only to increase the system’s bandwidth, robustness and performance but also to simplify and speed up the control commissioning, which is very important for the Advanced LIGO project that will be using 5 of these platforms in each of its 3 detectors.Copyright
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
F. Matichard; M. Evans; R. Mittleman; M. MacInnis; S. Biscans; K. L. Dooley; H. Sohier; A. Lauriero; H. Paris; J. Koch; P. Knothe; A. Carbajo; C. Dufort
Tilt-horizontal coupling in inertial sensors limits the performance of active isolation systems such as those used in gravitational wave detectors. Inertial rotation sensors can be used to subtract the tilt component from the signal produced by horizontal inertial sensors, but such techniques are often limited by the sensor noise of the tilt measurement. A different approach is to mechanically filter the tilt transmitted to the horizontal inertial sensor, as discussed in this article. This technique does not require an auxiliary rotation sensor and can produce a lower noise measurement. The concept investigated uses a mechanical suspension to isolate the inertial sensor from input tilt. Modeling and simulations show that such a configuration can be used to adequately attenuate the tilt transmitted to the instrument, while maintaining translation sensitivity in the frequency band of interest. The analysis is supported by experimental results showing that this approach is a viable solution to overcome the tilt problem in the field of active inertial isolation.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2018
S. Biscans; J. Warner; R. Mittleman; C. C. Buchanan; M. W. Coughlin; M. Evans; H. Gabbard; J. Harms; B. Lantz; N. Mukund; A. Pele; Charles Pezerat; Pascal Picart; H. Radkins; T. J. Shaffer
Advanced gravitational-wave detectors such as the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatories (LIGO) require an unprecedented level of isolation from the ground. When in operation, they are expected to observe changes in the space-time continuum of less than one thousandth of the diameter of a proton. Strong teleseismic events like earthquakes disrupt the proper functioning of the detectors, and result in a loss of data until the detectors can be returned to their operating states. An earthquake early-warning system, as well as a prediction model have been developed to help understand the impact of earthquakes on LIGO. This paper describes a control strategy to use this early-warning system to reduce the LIGO downtime by 30%. It also presents a plan to implement this new earthquake configuration in the LIGO automation system.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2017
M. W. Coughlin; Paul S. Earle; J. Harms; S. Biscans; C. C. Buchanan; Eric Coughlin; F. Donovan; Jeremy Fee; H. Gabbard; Michelle R. Guy; N. Mukund; Matthew R. Perry
Ground-based gravitational wave interferometers such as the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) are susceptible to ground shaking from high-magnitude teleseismic events, which can interrupt their operation in science mode and significantly reduce their duty cycle. It can take several hours for a detector to stabilize enough to return to its nominal state for scientific observations. The down time can be reduced if advance warning of impending shaking is received and the impact is suppressed in the isolation system with the goal of maintaining stable operation even at the expense of increased instrumental noise. Here, we describe an early warning system for modern gravitational-wave observatories. The system relies on near real-time earthquake alerts provided by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Preliminary low latency hypocenter and magnitude information is generally available in 5 to 20 min of a significant earthquake depending on its magnitude and location. The alerts are used to estimate arrival times and ground velocities at the gravitational-wave detectors. In general, 90% of the predictions for ground-motion amplitude are within a factor of 5 of measured values. The error in both arrival time and ground-motion prediction introduced by using preliminary, rather than final, hypocenter and magnitude information is minimal. By using a machine learning algorithm, we develop a prediction model that calculates the probability that a given earthquake will prevent a detector from taking data. Our initial results indicate that by using detector control configuration changes, we could prevent interruption of operation from 40 to 100 earthquake events in a 6-month time-period.
Precision Engineering-journal of The International Societies for Precision Engineering and Nanotechnology | 2015
F. Matichard; B. Lantz; K. Mason; R. Mittleman; B. Abbott; S. Abbott; E. Allwine; S. Barnum; J. Birch; S. Biscans; Damon A. Clark; D. C. Coyne; D. DeBra; R. T. Derosa; S. Foley; P. Fritschel; J. A. Giaime; C. Gray; G. Grabeel; J. Hanson; M. Hillard; J. S. Kissel; C. Kucharczyk; A. Le Roux; V. Lhuillier; M. MacInnis; B. O’Reilly; D. J. Ottaway; H. Paris; M. Puma
Precision Engineering-journal of The International Societies for Precision Engineering and Nanotechnology | 2015
F. Matichard; B. Lantz; K. Mason; R. Mittleman; B. Abbott; S. Abbott; E. Allwine; S. Barnum; J. Birch; S. Biscans; Damon A. Clark; D. C. Coyne; D. DeBra; R. T. Derosa; S. Foley; P. Fritschel; J. A. Giaime; C. Gray; G. Grabeel; J. Hanson; M. Hillard; J. S. Kissel; C. Kucharczyk; A. Le Roux; V. Lhuillier; M. MacInnis; B. O’Reilly; D. J. Ottaway; H. Paris; M. Puma
Journal of Sound and Vibration | 2018
S. Biscans; S. Gras; M. Evans; P. Fritschel; Charles Pezerat; Pascal Picart