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Multi-link laser interferometer architecture for a next generation GRAC

Posted on:2018-07-30Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:The Australian National University (Australia)Candidate:Francis, Samuel PeterFull Text:PDF
GTID:2442390005451681Subject:Aerospace engineering
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
When GRACE Follow-On (GRACE-FO) launches, it will be the first time a laser interferometer has been used to measure displacement between spacecraft. In the future, interspacecraft laser interferometry will be used in LISA, a space-based gravitational wave detector, that requires the change in separation between three spacecraft to be measured with a resolution of 1 pm/rtHz. The sensitivity of an interspacecraft interferometer is potentially limited by spacecraft degrees-of-freedom, such as rotation, coupling into the interspacecraft displacement measurement. GRACE-FO and LISA therefore have strict requirements placed on the positioning and alignment of the interferometers during spacecraft integration.;Decades of work has gone into adapting traditionally lab-based techniques for these space applications. As an example, GRACE-FO stops rotation of the two spacecraft from coupling into displacement using the triple mirror assembly. The triple mirror assembly is a precision optic, comprised of three mirrors, that function as a retroreflector. Provided the triple mirror assembly vertex coincides with the spacecraft centre of mass, any spacecraft rotation will asymmetrically lengthen and shorten the optical pathlengths of the incoming and outgoing beams, ensuring that the round trip pathlength between the spacecraft is unaffected. To achieve the required displacement sensitivity, the triple mirror assembly vertex must be positioned within 0.5 mm of the spacecraft centre of mass, making spacecraft integration challenging.;In this thesis a new, all-fibre interferometer architecture is presented that aims to simplify the positioning and alignment of space-based interferometers. Using multiple interspacecraft link measurements and high-speed signal processing the interspacecraft displacement is synthesised in post-processing. The multi-link interferometry concept is similar to the triple mirror assembly's symmetric suppression of rotation, however, since the rotation-to-pathlength cancellation is performed in post-processing, the weighting of each interspacecraft link measurement can be optimised to completely cancel any rotation coupled error. Consequently, any uncertainty in the positioning of the multi-link interferometer during spacecraft integration can be corrected for in post-processing. The strict hardware integration requirements of current interferometers can therefore be relaxed, enabling a new class of simpler, cheaper missions. (Abstract shortened by ProQuest.).
Keywords/Search Tags:Interferometer, Laser, Triple mirror assembly, GRACE-FO, Spacecraft, Displacement, Multi-link
PDF Full Text Request
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