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Gravitation Wave Interferometer Noise Calculator

Project description

pipeline status

Python Gravitational Wave Interferometer Noise Calculator

aLIGO

pygwinc is a multi-faceted tool for processing and plotting noise budgets for ground-based gravitational wave detectors. It's primary feature is a collection of mostly analytic noise calculation functions for various sources of noise affecting detectors (gwinc.noise):

  • quantum noise
  • mirror coating thermal noise
  • mirror substrate thermal noise
  • suspension fiber thermal noise
  • seismic noise
  • Newtonian/gravity-gradient noise
  • residual gas noise

pygwinc is also a generalized noise budgeting tool (gwinc.nb) that allows users to create arbitrary noise budgets (for any experiment, not just ground-based GW detectors) using measured or analytically calculated data. See the budget interface section below.

pygwinc includes canonical budgets for various well-known current and future GW detectors (gwinc.ifo):

See IFO.md for the latest CI-generated plots and hdf5 cached data.

The inspiral_range package can be used to calculate various common "inspiral range" figures of merit for gravitational wave detector budgets. See the inspiral range section below.

usage

command line interface

pygwinc provides a command line interface that can be used to calculate and plot the various canonical IFO noise budgets described above. For most distributions this should be available via gwinc at the command line, or python3 -m gwinc otherwise:

$ gwinc aLIGO

Or custom budgets may also be processed by providing the path to the budget module/package:

$ gwinc path/to/mybudget

Budget plots can be saved in various formats (.png, .svg, .pdf):

$ gwinc --save aLIGO.png aLIGO

Or trace data can be saved to an HDF5 file:

$ gwinc --save aLIGO.hdf5 aLIGO

Trace HDF5 files can also be plotted directly:

$ gwinc aLIGO.hdf5

The --range option can be used to include the values of various inspiral ranges for the overall noise in the output.

IFO parameters can be manipulated from the command line with the --ifo option:

$ gwinc aLIGO --ifo Optics.SRM.Tunephase=3.14

You can also dump the IFO parameters to a YAML-formatted parameter file:

$ gwinc --yaml aLIGO > my_aLIGO.yaml
$ edit my_aLIGO.yaml
$ gwinc -d my_aLIGO.yaml aLIGO
                             aLIGO    my_aLIGO.yaml
Materials.Coating.Philown    5e-05            3e-05
$ gwinc my_aLIGO.yaml

Stand-alone YAML files assume the nominal 'aLIGO' budget description.

The command line interface also includes an "interactive" mode which provides an IPython shell for interacting with a processed budget:

$ gwinc -i Aplus
GWINC interactive shell

The 'ifo' Struct and 'trace' data are available for inspection.
Use the 'whos' command to view the workspace.

You may interact with the plot using the 'plt' functions, e.g.:

In [.]: plt.title("My Special Budget")
In [.]: plt.savefig("mybudget.pdf")

In [1]: 

See command help for more info:

$ gwinc --help

library interface

For custom plotting, parameter optimization, etc. all functionality can be accessed directly through the gwinc library interface:

>>> import gwinc
>>> budget = gwinc.load_budget('aLIGO')
>>> trace = budget.run()
>>> fig = trace.plot()
>>> fig.show()

A default frequency array is used, but alternative frequencies can be provided to load_budget() either in the form of a numpy array:

>>> import numpy as np
>>> freq = np.logspace(1, 3, 1000)
>>> budget = gwinc.load_budget('aLIGO', freq=freq)

or frequency specification string ('FLO:[NPOINTS:]FHI'):

>>> budget = gwinc.load_budget('aLIGO', freq='10:1000:1000')

The load_budget() function takes most of the same inputs as the command line interface (e.g. IFO names, budget module paths, YAML parameter files), and returns the instantiated Budget object defined in the specified budget module (see budget interface below). The budget ifo gwinc.Struct is available in the budget.ifo attribute.

The budget run() method calculates all budget noises and the noise total and returns a BudgetTrace object with freq, psd, and asd properties. The budget sub-traces are available through a dictionary (trace['QuantumVacuum']) interface and via attributes (trace.QuantumVacumm).

The budget freq and ifo attributes can be updated at run time by passing them as keyword arguments to the run() method:

>>> budget = load_budget('aLIGO')
>>> freq = np.logspace(1, 3, 1000)
>>> ifo = Struct.from_file('/path/to/ifo_alt.yaml')
>>> trace = budget.run(freq=freq, ifo=ifo)

noise functions

The pygwinc analytical noise functions are available in the gwinc.noise package. This package includes multiple sub-modules for the different types of noises, e.g. suspensionthermal, coatingthermal, quantum, etc.)

The various noise functions need many different parameters to calculate their noise outputs. Many parameters are expected to be in the form of object attributes of a class-like container that is passed to the calculation function. The pygwinc Struct object is designed to hold such parameters.

For instance, the coating_brownian function expects a materials structure as input argument, that holds the various mirror materials parameters (e.g. materials.Substrate.MirrorY):

def coating_brownian(f, materials, wavelength, wBeam, dOpt):
    ...
    # extract substructures
    sub = materials.Substrate
    ...
    # substrate properties
    Ysub = sub.MirrorY

gwinc.Struct objects

pygwinc provides a Struct class that can hold parameters in attributes and additionally acts like a dictionary, for passing to the noise calculation functions. Structs can be created from dictionaries, or loaded from various file formats (see below).

YAML parameter files

The easiest way to store all budget parameters is in a YAML file. YAML files can be loaded directly into gwinc.Struct objects via the Struct.from_file() class method:

from gwinc import Struct
ifo = Struct.from_file('/path/to/ifo.yaml')

YAML parameter files can also be given to the load_budget() function as described above, in which case the base 'aLIGO' budget structure will be assumed and returned, with the YAML Struct inserted in the Budget.ifo class attribute.

Here are the included ifo.yaml files for all the canonical IFOs:

The Struct.from_file() class method can also load MATLAB structs defined in .mat files, for compatibility with matgwinc, and MATLAB .m files, although the later requires the use of the python MATLAB engine.

budget interface

pygwinc provides a generic noise budget interface, gwinc.nb, that can be used to define custom noise budgets (it also underlies the "canonical" budgets included in gwinc.ifo). Budgets are defined in a "budget module" which includes BudgetItem definitions.

BudgetItem classes

The gwinc.nb package provides three BudgetItem classes that can be inherited to define the various components of a budget:

  • nb.Noise: a noise source
  • nb.Calibration: a noise calibration
  • nb.Budget: a group of noises

The primary action of a BudgetItem happens in it's calc() method. For Noise classes, the calc method should return the noise PSD at the specified frequency points. For the Calibration class, calc should return a frequency response. Budget classes should not have a special calc method defined as they already know how to calculate the overall noise from their constituent noises and calibrations.

Additionally BudgetItems have two other methods, load and update, that can be overridden by the user to handle arbitrary data processing. These are useful for creating budgets from "live" dynamic noise measurements and the like. The three core methods therefore are:

  • load(): initial loading of static data
  • update(**kwargs): update data/attributes
  • calc(): return final data array

Generally these methods are not called directly. Instead, the Noise and Budget classes include a run method that smartly executes them in sequence and returns a BudgetTrace object for the budget.

See the built-in BudgetItem documentation for more info (e.g. pydoc3 gwinc.nb.BudgetItem)

budget module definition

A budget module is a standard python module (single .py file) or package (directory containing __inti__.py file) containing BudgetItem definitions describing the various noises and calibrations of a budget, as well as the overall budget calculation itself. Each budget module should include one nb.Budget class definition named after the module name.

Here's an example of a budget module named MyBudget. It defines two Noise classes and one Calibration class, as well as the overall Budget class (name MyBudget that puts them all together):

$ find MyBudget
MyBudget/
MyBudget/__init__.py
MyBudget/ifo.yaml
$
# MyBudget/__init__.py

import numpy as np
from gwinc import nb
from gwinc import noise


class SuspensionThermal(nb.Noise):
    """Suspension thermal noise"""
    style = dict(
        label='Suspension Thermal',
        color='#ad900d',
        linestyle='--',
    )

    def calc(self):
        n = noise.suspensionthermal.suspension_thermal(
            self.freq, self.ifo.Suspension)
        return 2 * n


class MeasuredNoise(nb.Noise):
    style = dict(
        label='Measured Noise',
        color='#838209',
        linestyle='-',
    )

    def load(self):
        psd, freq = np.loadtxt('/path/to/measured/psd.txt')
        self.data = self.interpolate(freq, psd)

    def calc(self):
        return self.data


class MyCalibration(nb.Calibration):
    def calc(self):
        return np.ones_like(self.freq) * 1234


class MyBudget(nb.Budget):
    noises = [
        SuspensionThermal,
        MeasuredNoise,
    ]
    
    calibrations = [
        MyCalibration,
    ]

The style attributes of the various Noise classes define plot style for the noise.

This budget can be loaded with the gwinc.load_budget() function, and processed as usual with the Budget.run() method:

budget = load_budget('/path/to/MyBudget', freq)
trace = budget.run()

Other than the necessary freq initialization argument that defines the frequency array, any additional keyword arguments are assigned as class attributes to the budget object, and to all of it's constituent sub noises/calibrations/budgets.

Note that the SuspensionThermal Noise class above uses the suspension_thermal analytic noise calculation function, which takes a "suspension" Struct as input argument. In this case, this suspension Struct is extracted from the self.ifo Struct at self.ifo.Suspension.

If a budget module defined as a package includes an ifo.yaml parameter file in the package directory, the load_budget() function will automatically load the YAML data into an ifo gwinc.Struct and assign it to the budget.ifo attribute.

The IFOs included in gwinc.ifo provide examples of the use of the budget interface (e.g. gwinc.ifo.aLIGO).

the "precomp" decorator

The BudgetItem supports "precomp" functions that can be used to calculate common derived values needed in multiple BudgetItems. They are specified using the nb.precomp decorator applied to the BudgetItem.calc() method. These functions are executed during the update() method call, supplied with the budget freq and ifo attributes as input arguments. The execution state of the precomp functions is cached at the Budget level, to prevent needlessly re-calculating them multiple times. For example:

from gwinc import nb


def precomp_foo(freq, ifo):
    pc = Struct()
    ...
    return pc


def precomp_bar(freq, ifo):
    pc = Struct()
    ...
    return pc


class Noise0(nb.Noise):
    @nb.precomp(foo=precomp_foo)
    def calc(self, foo):
        ...

class Noise1(nb.Noise):
    @nb.precomp(foo=precomp_foo)
    @nb.precomp(bar=precomp_bar)
    def calc(self, foo, bar):
        ...

class MyBudget(nb.Budget):
    noises = [
        Noise0,
        Noise1,
    ]

When MyBudget.run() is called, all the precomp functions will be executed, e.g.:

precomp_foo(self.freq, self.ifo)
precomp_bar(self.freq, self.ifo)

But the precomp_foo function will only be calculated once even though it's specified as needed by both Noise0 and Noise1.

extracting single noise terms

There are various way to extract single noise terms from the Budget interface. The most straightforward way is to run the full budget, and extract the noise data the output traces dictionary:

budget = load_budget('/path/to/MyBudget', freq)
trace = budget.run()
quantum_trace = trace['QuantumVacuum']

You can also calculate the final calibrated output noise for just a single term using the Budget calc_noise() method:

data = budget.calc_noise('QuantumVacuum')

You can also calculate a noise at it's source, without applying any calibrations, by using the Budget __getitem__ interface to extract the specific Noise BudgetItem for the noise you're interested in, and running it's calc() method directly:

data = budget['QuantumVacuum'].calc()

inspiral range

The inspiral_range package can be used to calculate various common "inspiral range" figures of merit for gravitational wave detector budgets. Here's an example of how to use it to calculate the inspiral range of the baseline 'Aplus' detector:

import gwinc
import inspiral_range
import numpy as np

freq = np.logspace(1, 3, 1000)
budget = gwinc.load_budget('Aplus', freq)
trace = budget.run()

range = inspiral_range.range(
    freq, trace.psd,
    m1=30, m2=30,
)

See the inspiral_range package for more details.

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