Thermorefringent noise in crystalline optical materials
Author(s)
Kryhin, Serhii; Hall, Evan D.; Sudhir, Vivishek
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Crystalline materials are increasingly employed to construct precision optical instruments because of their reduced mechanical dissipation and consequent reduction of thermal Brownian noise. However, the anisotropy of the crystalline state implies a fundamental source of thermal noise; depolarization induced by thermal fluctuations of its birefringence. We establish the theory of this effect, which is a generalization of prior treatments of thermo-optic noises in amorphous materials. This theory—in conjunction with poorly understood anisotropic thermal stress coefficients of crystalline coatings—predict that thermo-refringent noise in crystalline mirror coatings may be lurking within an order of magnitude of Brownian noise (below 100 Hz). Thus, in order to appreciate the full promise of crystalline optical materials, a more precise understanding of their anisotropic material constants is necessary. Barring that, we elucidate measurement techniques that can affect partial coherent cancellation of thermorefringent noise. In passing, our general formalism also predicts the existence of thermal beam-pointing noise.
Date issued
2023-01-03Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics; LIGO (Observatory : Massachusetts Institute of Technology); Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical EngineeringJournal
Physical Review D
Publisher
American Physical Society
Citation
Kryhin, Serhii, Hall, Evan D. and Sudhir, Vivishek. 2023. "Thermorefringent noise in crystalline optical materials." Physical Review D, 107 (2).
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2470-0010
2470-0029