|
I.INTRODUCTIONBeyond its use in geophysics (survey of geological structures) or in large scale metrology [1], laser-based measurement of long distances is expected to find numerous applications in space missions. Nanometer-scale accuracy and resolution on the spacing of the satellites of a geodesy mission will improve the mapping of the gravitational field of the earth. Synthetic aperture instruments in formation flight, such as hypertelescopes [2] or the Darwin mission [3], require that the constellation geometry is known and controlled to much better than the wavelength of the observation window. Maintaining and controlling the relative pointing of satellites also requires high-accuracy high-resolution absolute ranging. Recording the phase of a beam modulated at high frequency F provides a simple way to monitor the distance to a target, up to an integer number N of synthetic wave-lengths Λ ≡ c / F. It has been shown that this idea can be implemented in a way such that N can be determined, providing absolute distance measurement with a resolution at the 10 nm scale [4]. However this resolution was obtained for time scales of 10 to 1000 s, while the demand is often for a measurement rate of 10/s or higher. This requires higher sensitivity and points to a measurement scheme which includes optical interferometry. Multi-wavelength interferometry has been able to provide both long synthetic wavelength and sub-wavelength accuracy [5]. Using multiple 40 GHz phase modulations of a CW laser, MSTAR [6] has reached nm-scale accuracy. More recently Coddington et al. [7] have demonstrated a laser ranging scheme that efficiently combines time-of-flight and interference measurements in a single measurement inspired from optical linear sampling [8]. The laser source, however, may require significant engineering to be space qualified. The telemeter presented here combines
If measurement iii) is precise enough to bring unambiguous meaning to measurement ii), which in turn has good enough precision to give absolute significance to measurement i), then absolute distances can be measured with an accuracy far better than the optical wavelength. Here we demonstrate a measurement scheme in which the two phase measurements i) and ii) are obtained, in a consistent way, from the same interference measurement, using a 20 GHz beatnote, two-mode laser beam. On a set-up on which an ≈ 8 meter optical path length is implemented, we show that this measurement scheme can achieve the conditions required to provide nanometer accuracy absolute distance measurements. This is obtained provided that systematic errors associated both to stray optical interference and high frequency amplitude-to-phase conversion are adequately dealt with. In this paper we present the two-mode interference signal, its properties and its exploitation for nanometer-scale accuracy absolute distance measurement. We will not address the time-of-flight aspect of the measurement scheme, and only assume that a time-of-flight measurement has been achieved beforehand with a relative accuracy of ≈10-5 or better [9], [1]. II.MEASUREMENT PRINCIPLEThe telemeter uses a synthetic wave for the purpose of ranging measurements. This synthetic wave is the result of the optical beat-note between two single-mode lasers at 1.54 μm phase-locked at a fixed frequency of F = 20.04 GHz [10]. The corresponding synthetic wavelength Λ≡ c / F is close to 15 mm. A.The two-mode interference signalThe two-mode [vopt, vopt + F] laser beam propagates along two different paths: a reference path of constant length l, and a measurement path of length L, variable. The interference of these two beams provides the signal from which we extract the quantity to be measured, i.e. the length difference between the two paths: ΔL = L - l. In the diagram above, we assume that the polarization of the initial beam is oriented so that a small fraction of the power, ε2 = a few %, propagates along the reference path with S polarization. The remaining power (fraction , close to 100%) propagates along the measurement path with P polarization (S polarization after the half-wave plate) and interferes with the reference beam. The intensity, I(t), of the two-mode interference is detected by photodiode PhD1. The (“reference”) photodiode PhD0 delivers a signal whose amplitude and phase are used to eliminate power and phase fluctuations of the laser sources. Photodiode PhD1 receives a beam whose intensity has three contributions: beam intensity of the measurement beam (fraction (1−ε2)), intensity of the reference beam (fraction ε2), and the interference term: where: ω ≡ 2πvopt =2πc / λopt, S ≡ 2πF = 2πc / Λ. Note that this expression is valid only in vacuum. Application to quantitative measurements in air would require that two indices of refraction, at the two wavelengths, are taken into account. The measurement exploits the phase and amplitude of the cos (δt) terms, modulated at the high frequency F. We will use the vector representation, wherein a signal A cos(δt + φ) is represented by a vector in the complex plane, and we re-write eq. 1 in the form where The ranging procedure has to determine two key parameters of the signal, as shown in Figure 2:
B.Characteristics of the two-mode interference signalScan of the master laser optical frequencyThe vector is the interference contribution. When the optical frequency vopt of the two-mode source varies over more than the free spectral range FSR ≡ c/(L−l), the tip of the vector (measurement signal) travels back and forth along the “segment” (Figure 2), of length , characteristic of the optical interference between the measurement and reference beams. In the ideal experiment, the segment is perfectly straight (this property will be used thoroughly in the identification and reduction of imperfections, see §IV). Dependence on the target positionThe ΔL dependence is more complex, as two of the three contributions to are affected by a change of the distance: Finally, the pattern obtained when the target is moved by half a synthetic wavelength displays a large number (ω/δ ≈ 104) of spikes. The spikes are illustrated on Fig. 3, with the choice of ω/δ ≈ 20 for the spikes to be conveniently observable. Each spike corresponds to one fringe of the optical interference. C.The ranging procedureFrom a single measurement of this complex interference signal (one single data point in the complex plane) one cannot extract the three contributions separately. However, assuming that a time-of-flight measurement has been done beforehand, with a precision better than 10−5, one has an estimate of the free spectral range FSR. One can then perform three measurements , in which the optical frequency of the beam is changed from vopt to vopt+ FSR / 4 and then to vopt+ FSR / 2, respectively. Then these three data points of the two-mode interference signal can be processed in a relatively straightforward manner to compute, separately, the interferometric phase Φinter =2πΔL/λopt (modulo 2π), and synthetic phase Φsynt =2πΔL/Λ (modulo 2π). We perform a measurement of every 15 μs and assume that ΔL does not vary during the three-state pattern. With this 3-fold data group , we first calculate the position of the segment centre: the length of the segment as well as its direction, given, for instance, by the direction of From eqns (3) and (4) above, and since ε2 << 1, we can use a perturbative treatment to subtract the vector and obtain the vector. Ideally, one can use the direction of to obtain the value of the synthetic phase, that is, the orientation of the signal in the complex plane. In practice, this approach will fail, due to the slow drifts (larger than 10−4 cycle at the 1minute time scale, see sect. V-A) in the measurement chains. However, the direction of the segment provides another determination of the synthetic phase, and the combination of these two provides (L −1)/Λ in a way which eliminates the slow drifts. This point can be seen by writing the identity In other words, one can obtain the synthetic phase δΔL/c as twice the angle between the and vectors: in this way, the long term phase drifts between the two detection chains are eliminated. This point, made possible by the choice of recording a two-mode interference signal, is essential in giving access to accuracies far below the optical wavelength. Finally, the interferometric phase is obtained from the vector D.Conditions for the ranging procedureFor the procedure to be applicable, it has to fulfill two conditions:
Condition i) involves the acquisition rate (the time interval τ between the recordings of and ) and the target speed. With 3-fold data groups , and τ=15μs, the maximum target speed is calculated to be of about 2.6 μm/s which is unacceptable. However, with a modified, yet straightforward procedure with 5 points , a gain by a factor of 100 (at 260 μm/s) can be obtained on the target speed limit. Higher speed limits may still be obtained by a more sophisticated procedure. For a rapidly moving target, for which nanometer accuracy is not required, the bare measurement signal is easily obtained by masking the reference beam and can be used to provide ranging information at high rate and intermediate precision. Condition ii) involves two different aspects.
The ranging procedure supports the movement of the target and allows to average N 3-fold data groups, yet keeping the benefit of interferometric measurement. The idea is to take advantage of the interferometric measurement, obtained at each cycle i, to correct the value of synthetic measurement ΔLsynt(ti) for each of N 3-fold data groups to obtain N values of , i.e N values of L at the beginning of the measurement cycle, which lend themselves to averaging. III.EXPERIMENTAL SET-UPA double pass AOM allows the update of optical frequency vopt to be done in about a microsecond. Wedged optics are systematically preferred, see § IV-A. The microwave signals (20.04 GHz) are detected by two 20 GHz bandwidth photodiodes. At the output of the mixers, the two 20 MHz sinusoidal signals are sampled during 10 μs using two 250 MS/s, 14 bit analog-to-digital converters. Inside a Virtex-6 FPGA, the signals are then translated from 20 MHz to 0 Hz, low-pass filtered and decimated. The resulting complex values are used every 27 μs to compute amplitudes and phase difference using the CORDIC algorithm [11]. The accuracy of the phase meter is about 3×10-5 on the amplitude ratio and 3×10-5 cycle on the phase measurement and the resolution is better than 10-6 cycle with averaging time of 25 ms: the device meets the specifications for the telemeter operation. The FPGA also controls the RF frequency fAOM sent to the AOM: the frequency changes are made at the end of each 10 μs elementary data acquisition. We chose to record 5-fold data groups, [vopt, vopt−ISL/4, vopt+ISL/4, vopt–ISL/2, vopt+ISL/2](instead of 3-fold in the basic procedure) for more redundancy in the signals and thus more checks against possible systematic errors. After N = 320 5-fold data groups, the FPGA transfers via Ethernet the phase and amplitude data to a computer which calculates ΔL using the procedure outlined in Sect. II. On Fig. 6 the 20 GHz signal is recorded during a fast scan of the length L of the measurement path (corner cube displacement of 7.5mm in 50 seconds). The non-regularity of the spikes is caused by the non-regularity of the target speed. The white areas correspond to data transfers, during which no data acquisition is possible. The significant fraction of dead zones in this example is due to the use of a very slow serial link (later replaced by a TCP-IP link). The spikes in figure 6 seem to be very straight. In fact detailed examination of the data may reveal significant distortions, of several kinds: elliptical distortion, with the consequence that “spikes” overlap, curved spikes, S-shaped spikes. These defects are:
IV.SYSTEMATIC DISTORTIONS ON THE MEASURED SIGNALA.Optical cross-talkAs well as the measurement and reference beams, characterized by the lengths L and l, and by the power fractions of 1-ε2 and ε2, a stray optical beam is characterized by the beam path length lstray and the power fraction εstray2. Each stray beam adds additional interference terms that tend to distort the segment. Depending on the value of lstray it can be shown that the distortion of the segment can be an ellipse, or a figure 8, an S shape,… Indeed an analytic treatment (see annex A) shows that it can be described by the corresponding Lissajoux curves. For these contributions to be smaller than 10−4 one has to achieve Such a rejection factor cannot be expected from an anti-reflection coating. As a consequence all the parallel optics of the setup, such as PBS and BS cubes…, have been replaced by wedged optics. Checking the level of stray contributions can be done by monitoring the phase and amplitude when the beam on the reference arm is blocked, hence preventing the interference: modulations, when the optical wavelength λopt is scanned over 1nm, are the signature of the presence of stray beams or multiple reflexions. B.Laser beat-note sidebandsEq. 1 is valid assuming a pure two-mode laser source. Optical amplifiers can affect the two-mode spectrum: self-modulation in a semi-conductor amplifier can add significant sidebands [12]. Fig. 7 shows data recorded when the beam is amplified in a semiconductor amplifier. The observed ellipticity is prohibitive (nearly 5 10-2). This is due to the significant fraction (≈10-2) of optical power in the sidebands, as observed with an optical spectrum analyzer, and has been eliminated by replacing the semiconductor optical amplifier by a fiber amplifier. By using only wedged optics and a spectrally pure, two-mode beat-note we obtain a signal without distortions related to optical defects. C.Cross-talk in the electronic measurement channelsElectronic crosstalk between the two channels is one of the causes of systematic error. This effect can be corrected for if the four parameters of the cross-talk (two amplitudes and two phases) have been determined beforehand. To this end, we mask the reference path, and move the target by a few Λ to vary the phase difference of the two channels for a few π radians. The crosstalk is of the order of a few 10-3 in amplitude, and proves to be quite stable over time. D.Amplitude-to-phase (AM-to-PM) couplingEach measurement channel is composed of a photodiode, a HF amplifier, a mixer, an RF amplifier and an analog-to-digital converter. Each of these components may generate amplitude-to-phase coupling. Dedicated experiments [13] made to quantify this effect in different photodiodes have shown that the AM-to-PM coupling includes a significant part which has a transient behavior, with typical time scales in the 10 μs range. Other microwave components (amplifiers for instance) may introduce other time scales in the transient AM-to-PM coupling. The ranging procedure implies large changes of the signal (up to a factor of 3 in amplitude) every 15 μs. As a consequence, beyond the distortion of the segment due to the stationary AM-to-PM, a hysteresis is expected at the 10-20 μs time scale due to the transient AM-to-PM. This is conspicuous in fig 8, with points . The fact that almost no hysteresis is observed with points and is due to the fact that Phase of points a2, a3, a4 are measured 8 μs after optical frequency change. The transient effect can be approximately corrected for by the exponential model below: where δ1 = 8 μs, δ2 = 15 μs result from the timing of the measurement procedure; Ai are amplitudes of the five data points; the free parameters are the factor f, and the time constants τ (the value is somewhat different for an increase and a decrease in the signal). The stationary effect is characterized by measuring the phase as a function of the signal level, when the level is varied slowly. By using a cubic polynomial, the correction can be performed easily on the measured phase and the curvatures on the segment are eliminated. Figure 13 below shows the two-mode interference signal when scanning the measurement length L, without and with the corrections of the AM-to-PM transfer. The curvature and hysteresis effects on the segments are well corrected and neighboring spikes do not overlap anymore. E.Saturation effectThe electronic components in the measurement channel can give rise to saturation. In the complex plane, saturation effect may add a curvature on the segment and change the segment length. Figure 10 below shows segments recorded at very high power, to highlight this curvature. The observed curvature results from both saturation and stationary AM-to-PM coupling. It turns out that in one part of the complex plane, the two effects approximately compensate: absence of curvature. The simulation (blue dots) is in agreement with the experimental data. By working V.RANGING MEASUREMENTSA.Statistical noise in the experimental dataNoise on the amplitude and phase of optical data is plotted as Allan deviation curves in Fig. 11. It clearly exceeds the noise recorded when the 20 MHz signal of a synthesizer is split and fed to the two channels of the data acquisition unit. The amplitude ratio (red curve) efficiently eliminates common mode instabilities on the two amplitudes (green and blue curves). At short time scale (< 270 μs), only white noise is observable on the phase difference and amplitude ratio measurements. The humps from 270 μs to 10 ms on amplitudes ratio corresponds to acoustic noise (mainly fans) in the room which disturbs the 7.5 m measurement path. We chose to work with 1600 points (320 5-fold data groups), where the phase and amplitudes ratio have their optimum stability, at 2.5 10-6 cycles and 2.5 10-5, respectively. A full cycle of the measurement procedure corresponds to 43 ms of data taking. From 1s to 10s and above, instabilities appear, which can be several 10-3 cycles at the 15 minute time scale. They are probably related to temperature instabilities of the circuits involved (amplifiers, mixers …). The HF amplifiers, in particular, dissipate significant power (several W). These drifts do not perturb the ranging procedure, performed and completed in a much shorter time (43 ms of data taking). B.Resolution of the interferometric measurementThe ranging procedure is tested over a folded ~ 7.5 m path on an optical table (simulating the measurement of a ~ 3.75 m distance). As the ToF measurement unit is not yet integrated on the telemeter setup, we tested the principle of two-mode interference measurement without the ToF measurement, but using a 3D measurement arm and the synthetic phase measurements at 20.04 GHz to obtain a value of L with an accuracy of about 10 μm. Figure 12 below shows the results of 320 measurements in about 43 ms, corresponding to 320 elementary cycles, with then without interference. From the noise observed on the data without interference one can expect a resolution of around 100pm on each elementary 5-fold measurement cycle (duration ≈100 μs), and significantly less than 100pm after the full cycle of a telemetric measurement (43 ms). C.Convergence of the high-accuracy measurementFor the telemetric measurement to deliver the correct value, it is necessary that the noise on the data be sufficiently low: if the noise is too high, the procedure may converge to a value which is shifted by one or several times λopt, even in the absence of systematics. We verified that the noise is low enough that the procedure converges mostly to the same value. Figure 14 below shows 85 successive measurements, during which the target is stationary at <10 nm. Only four errors are observable. This result is satisfactory, as the detection chains have not yet been optimized in terms of noise (HF amplifiers, in particular, are standard components). D.The accuracy and the effect of electronic distortions on the resultHere, the range measurement procedure is repeated while the target is moved continuously at about 2 μm/minute. The speed is a few wavelengths per minute. We record 10,000 full measurement cycles in 10 minutes. The expected, ideal pattern for the two-mode interference signal, shown in Fig. 3, is a regular series of spikes, each spike being an interference fringe. As seen on Fig. 15 below, the recorded spikes are not regular at the 10−3 radian level. Due to the slow phase drifts in the two measurement chains at the 10s-1 mn time scale, the spikes are sometimes superposed. However, as mentioned above, the length measurements are completed in a much shorter time, and are not affected. After the phase and amplitudes measurements of 10,000 full cycles, we proceed to the calculation of 10000 length values , (see end of Sect. II-D), plotted in Fig. 16. Without correcting for the electronic distortions, Figure 16-a, systematic errors are large (~100 μm), and correlated with the interference fringes, as expected from crosstalk and AM-to-PM coupling, since the interference order strongly modulates the signal amplitude. If electronic defects are corrected for, Figure 16-b, the result is much better, the procedure converges with a rate of 74.5%. The wrong values (shifted by ±λopt) do not seem to be randomly scattered. Thus we suspect that more accurate correction of the data would further eliminate systematic effects. To approach 100% convergence, work should focus both on electronic imperfections and on noise. This operation mode is not acceptable for efficient ranging, since it considerably slows the measurement rate, but it is a benchmark for quantifying the importance of transient effects in fast acquisition mode. VI.CONCLUTIONSWith these results we demonstrate that the two-mode interference signal can be exploited for high-resolution, high accuracy absolute distance measurement, if combined with a time-of-flight measurement. This is confirmed, not only by tests (not presented here) performed on simulated data affected by noise, but also by tests on the recorded data. In this work, the specific form and behavior of the signal is thoroughly exploited. The ideally straight “segment” which manifests the interference fringes, was particularly useful to identify, classify, quantify and reduce the various systematics on the ranging signal. It also allows to obtain the “synthetic wavelength” phase measurement 2π ΔL/Λ with an accuracy which is not limited by the long term phase drifts in the two microwave measurement chains. From the observed noise on the two-mode interference signal, we expect a resolution of about 20 pm on a 43 ms signal data set. The measurement update rate is currently ≈60 ms but, at least in principle, nothing prevents from achieving an update every 100 or 200μs with a resolution of about 100pm, provided commercial programmable circuits are powerful enough to complete the data processing required for the determination of the distance. At the present time, this measurement scheme still has to improve the rejection of the systematics associated with the transient behaviour of the AM-to-PM coupling in the opto-microwave measurement chain. This electronic defect has to be corrected for, otherwise most of the time the procedure will converge to wrong distance values, offset by an integer number of times λοpt/2. The data processing required to correct for transient AM-to-PM effects adds significant complexity to the ranging procedure and introduces additional parameters, yet without completely solving the problem: at fast measurement rate, about 1 measurement out of 4 is wrong by ±λopt/2. The observation [13] that the bias voltage applied to the 20 GHz photodiodes is a critical parameter that governs the properties of the AM-to-PM coupling offers the perspective that this difficulty may be significantly reduced by an appropriate choice of Vbias. We are currently implementing this idea on the set-up with the perspective that this difficulty may be significantly reduced, and that an instrument with performances similar to, or exceeding those of [5] or [7] can be implemented without the use of a frequency comb. AppendicesAnnex: The two-mode interference signal in the presence of a stray optical beamIn the most general case, we suppose that the signal we detect is the interference of N optical beams, each beam being a two-mode beat-note according to: More generally, (A-1) can be rewritten as , with m = 1 to N, and Bm =ω t, Cm =ωlm/c, Dm = δ(t − lm/c). With the amplitude of the optical beam one can calculate the intensity at the measurement photodiode: Ideally, we only have two beams, with power fractions of , that travel along the reference path of length l and measurement path of length L. If a stray beam (characterized by the beam path length lstray and the power fraction ), also interferes, the high-frequency part of the intensity is the sum of six terms, out of which three are interference terms. In the complex plane, the vector that describes the microwave signal includes three interference “segment” terms. Beyond term #1, which corresponds to the main (ideal) segment, interference terms #2 and 3 add perturbations that may distort the segment. Term #2, for instance, can give rise
AcknowledgementsGenerally speaking, the classification of the Lissajoux curves is appropriate to describe the different types of possible distortions of the segment. This work was supported by ANR (Grant ANR-07-BLAN-0309-01) and CNES. REFERENCESEstler, W. T.,
“Large-scale metrology-an update,”
CIRP Annals., 51
(2), 587
–609
(2002). Google Scholar
H. LeCoroller, J. Dejonghe, C. Arpesella, D. Vernet, A. Labeyrie,
“Tests with a Calina-type hypertelescope prototype,”
Astron. & Astrophys, 426 721
–728
(2004). Google Scholar
M. Fridlund,
“Future space missions to search for terrestrial planets,”
Space Sci. Rev., 135 355
–369
(2008). Google Scholar
C. Courde, M. Lintz, A. Brillet,
“High accuracy laser telemetry. Towards sub-micron accuracy in the measurement of kilometer scale distances without interferometry,”
Instrumentation, Mesures, Metrologie, 10 81
–101
(2010). Google Scholar
Y. Salvadé, N. Schuhler, S. Lévêque and S. Le Floch,
“High-accuracy absolute distance measurement using frequency-comb referenced multiwavelength source,”
Appl. Opt., 47 2715
–2720
(2008). Google Scholar
O. P. Lay,
“MSTAR: a sub-micrometer absolute metrology system,”
Opt. Lett., 28 890
–892
(2003). Google Scholar
I. Coddington, W. C. Swann, L. Nenadovic, N. R. Newbury,
“Rapid and precise absolute distancemeasurements at long range,”
Nature Photonics, 3 351
–356
(2009). Google Scholar
C. Dorrer, D. C. Kilper, H. R. Stuart, G. Raybon and M. G. Raymer,
“Linear optical sampling,”
IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett., 15 1746
–1748
(2003). Google Scholar
Etienne Samain, private communication, Google Scholar
J. Fatome,
“Multiple four-wave mixing in optical fibers: 1. 5-3. 4-THz femto second pulse sources and real-time monitoring of a 20-GHz picosecond source,”
Opt. Com., 283 2425
–2429
(2010). Google Scholar
J. E. Volder,
“The CORDIC trigonometric computing technique,”
IRE Transactions on Electronic Computers, 8 330
–334
(1959). Google Scholar
Lévêque, A. Gauguet, W. Chaibiet Landragin, A.,
“Low noise amplification of an optically carried microwave signal: application to atom interferometry,”
Applied Physic B, 101 723
–729
(2010). Google Scholar
D. H. Phung,
“Dynamics of the Amplitude-to-Phase Coupling in 1. 5 μm High Bandwidth Photodiodes,”
submitted to IEEE Trans. on Microwave Theory and Techniques., Google Scholar
|