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Revealing optical loss from modal frequency degeneracy in a long optical cavity.

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Optical loss plays a significant role in optical experiments involving optical cavities such as recycling cavities and filter cavities in laser interferometer gravitational-wave detectors. For those cavities, modal frequency degeneracy,… Click to show full abstract

Optical loss plays a significant role in optical experiments involving optical cavities such as recycling cavities and filter cavities in laser interferometer gravitational-wave detectors. For those cavities, modal frequency degeneracy, where the fundamental and a higher order mode resonate inside the cavity simultaneously, is a potential mechanism which may bring extra optical loss to the cavity thus degrade detection sensitivity. In this paper, we report observation of modal frequency degeneracy in a large-scale suspended Fabry-Pérot cavity. The cavity g-factor is tuned by a CO2 laser heating one test mass, and the cavity finesse is obtained from a ring-down measurement of the transmitted light. We demonstrate that the modal frequency degeneracy can cause a reduction of the cavity finesse by up to ∼30%, corresponding to a ∼2-fold increase in total optical loss. To minimize optical loss in gravitational-wave detectors, the effect of modal frequency degeneracy needs to be taken into account in the design and operation of the detector.

Keywords: frequency degeneracy; modal frequency; cavity; optical loss

Journal Title: Optics express
Year Published: 2021

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