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Measurement of the group refractive index in the ANTARES site with the Optical Beacons at 3 wavelengths ● Introduction ● Method ● Measurement with Monte Carlo ● Data results (Public plot) Velocity of light in water
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Introduction (ANTRS-Phys/2001-005) ● Cerenkov angle given by phase velocity, but light propagates with group velocity ● Group to phase refractive index related by: ● Parametric formulation of phase refractive index has dependence of wavelength, temperature, salinity and pressure
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Group and phase refractive index as function of lambda Measure velocity of light emitted by Optical Beacons in Antares water Fix: T=13.2ºC S=3.844%
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Expected effects 1. Scattering: larger distance=>smaller velocity=> larger n 2. Early photon: Gaussian time distribution at source arrival time of first photon at nearby PMT earlier than expected larger time=>smaller velocity=> larger n OB PMT
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Method (Led run) Led run=Flash light from a given position Measure time when light reaches PMT Time : T_1 Distance: D_1 Time : T_2 Distance: D_2
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Method (Plot MC) Fit linear function => v_measured n=v_vacuum/v_measured
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Method ● Take Led run ● Time = peak given by highest bin ● Position = nominal OM position ● Eliminate not significant peak (Noise>Peak-5*sqrt(Peak))=>defines max. fit value ● Charge per hit defines min. fit value ● Fit linear function (time vs. distance)=>v_measured ● Refraction index: n=v_vacuum/v_measured
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MC test with two different refraction index Measurement n=1.379 +-0.001 (fit error) MC Input n=1.3786 (at 472nm=Led run) (absorption=60m and scattering=infinite) Measurement n=1.370+-0.003 (fit error) MC Input n=1.3681 (at 532nm=Laser run) (with absorption=28m and scattering=55m) Conclusion: Method gives reliable results Ask Ciro for MC
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MC Measured refractive index n Absorption Scattering n 60 Inf 1.379+-0.001 60 55 1.382+-0.001 60 30 1.386+-0.002 120 55 1.382+-0.001 30 55 1.386+-0.002 MC Input n=1.3786 (at 472nm) Conclusion: Small model dependence (about 0.5%) more scattering=>larger n
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Early photon effect (MC) Introduce cut to minimize early photon effect: Charge per hit minimal distance
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Stability against cuts (Noise>Peak-5*sqrt(Peak))=>defines maximum fit value Charge per hit defines minimum fit value Change charge per hit cut to 5.0 => 0.2% Change charge per hit cut to 1.2 => 0.2% Change Peak-10*sqrt(Peak) cut => 0.5% Conclusion: Small cut dependence (about 0.5%)
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Data (run 33987) 3 OM per position For fit: error in time 1 ns error in position 1 m
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Data at 472 nm (22 runs) n=1.390+-0.007/sqrt(22) (+-0.2%)
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Put errors together 1.Method stable against cuts +-0.5% 2.Method stable against different assumption for absorption and scattering +-0.5% 3.Measurement at lambda=470 nm (Led) n=1.390+- 0.2%(stat.)+-0.5%(exp.)+-0.5%(theo.) =>n=1.390+-0.010 ● Do same for Laser (3 runs) and UV (1 run)
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How well do we know the wavelength of OB?
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Optical Beacon Wavelength Measurement The three wavelength sources (LED @ 470 nm, and 400 nm and Laser) have been measured with a high res calibrated spectrometer from Ocean Optics HR4000CG-UV-NIR Measurements: A sample of 20 cleaved blue LEDs (Agilent HLMP-CB15) Usual standard LED of LOB Beacons Nominal wavelength: 472 nm (35 nm FWHM) A sample of 15 cleaved HUVL 400-520 B LED used in L12F2 and L11F2 Nominal wavelength: 400 nm (20 nm FWHM) Spectrometer checked with the Green Nd-YAG Laser (532 nm) (D. Real, F Urbano, A Sánchez, J Ruiz-Rivas)
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Optical Beacon Wavelength Measurement Blue LEDs @ 472 nm 3414.4468.5 FWHMSigmaMean value Mean Value distribution
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Optical Beacon Wavelength Measurement Blue LEDs @ 400 nm 16.26.9403.1 FWHMSigmaMean value Mean value distribution
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Conclusion
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