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Environmental Monitoring (Environmental Monitoring)
fiori, paoletti - 9:16 Friday 06 July 2018 (42081) Print this report
shaking of IB tower to measure vibro-acoustic noise conversion

As part of yesterday morning shift we performed a set of shaking of IB tower tank (without any ITF nor ISYS). We generated som broadband noise 50-600Hz and then a set of lines. Times are reported in the attached log file.

We measure a quite loud level of acoustic noise in the laser lab (Figure 1, showing just a subset of injected lines). We can also observe that the IB tower tank vibration excites more easily btw 200-300Hz and 400-600Hz.

We want to use this data to measure the TF of IB tower vibration to acoustic noise in the LL.

Also the CEB hall microphone (not shown) measures comparably loud acoustic lines, this we think is because the tower emits towards the hall as well.

With past loudspeaker injections we measured the TF of sound transmission between CEB hall and LL, that should help to disentangle the path. Work in progress. 

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ruggi - 15:09 Friday 06 July 2018 (42083) Print this report

Considering that the noise injection on IB tower is well visible on the accelerometers located on SIB1 suspension top stage, we took in occount the possibility that the ground shaking passes through the suspension and move the bench enough to produce the disturbance on RFC error signal. In support of this idea is the fact that a 101 Hz peak is visible when the SIB1 is shaked directly from the angular control actuators.

We injected a line at 101.1 Hz on the top stage actuators, in order to produce about the same suspension motion as when the tower is shaked (fig 1). The effect on RFC was visible, but 10 times lower (fig 2). Moreover, a certain excitation was visible on the accelerometer located on IB tower, meaning that the back action from the suspension actuators and the tower was not negligible.

The first conclusion is that the suspension is not the main path through which the tower shaking can produce an effect on RFC.

The second conclusion is that the transer function from top stage actuation to bench motion cannot be measured because the effect on RFC sensor is covered by a different path.

In fig 3 we see that during the tower shaking also an accelerometer located on EIB measures a motion. We should investigate the possibility that the effect on RFC is generated by this motion.

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