22–26 Jul 2024
CICG - GENEVA, Switzerland
Europe/Zurich timezone

Status of cryostat design for cryogenic payload suspension studies for the Einstein Telescope

24 Jul 2024, 14:00
2h
Poster area

Poster area

Poster Presentation (120m) ICMC 15: Cryogenic materials and devices testing, methods and standards Wed-Po-2.2

Speaker

Xhesika Koroveshi (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT))

Description

The Einstein Telescope (ET) is a third generation gravitational wave detector planned in Europe, combining a low-frequency (LF) and a high-frequency (HF) laser interferometer. Cryogenic operation of ET-LF in the temperature range of 10 K to 20 K is essential to suppress the suspension thermal noise, which dominates the detection sensitivity at
frequencies below 10 Hz. This requires suspension materials with high thermal conductivity and low mechanical dissipation at cryogenic temperatures. The baseline design currently considers two suspension concepts, using monocrystalline suspension fibers made of silicon or sapphire, and/or a thin-wall titanium suspension tube filled with static He-II. The mechanical Q-factor provides physical insight into dissipative mechanisms of material samples and their applicability as cryogenic suspensions in gravitational wave detectors. It is measured by the ring-down method, exciting the suspensions to resonant vibrations and analyzing the decay time. For this purpose, a test facility is being designed that enables full-size studies with various suspension materials and geometries. This includes also the integration of a noise-free He-II supply for investigating dissipation mechanisms in the static He-II column inside suspension tubes, which is a new field of research. We present the design progress,including specific design conditions imposed by the experimental campaigns.

Submitters Country Germany

Author

Xhesika Koroveshi (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT))

Co-authors

Michael Stamm (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)) Piero Rapagnani (Universita degli studi di Roma “La Sapienza") Steffen Grohmann (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT))

Presentation materials