AI Article Synopsis

  • Future geodesy missions like GRACE can improve science by using advanced accelerometers similar to those in LISA Pathfinder, enhancing climate and water management research.
  • These new systems can achieve high precision in measuring displacement, relying on robust methods to suppress laser-frequency noise.
  • The paper discusses a Mach-Zehnder interferometer design using a stable pentaprism, achieving impressive frequency stability and enabling the testing of sensitive instruments for future missions.

Article Abstract

Future GRACE-like geodesy missions could benefit from adopting accelerometer technology akin to that of the LISA Pathfinder, which employed laser interferometric readout at the sub-picometer level in addition to the conventional capacitive sensing, which is at best at the level of 100 pm. Improving accelerometer performance holds great potential to enhance the scientific output of forthcoming missions, carrying invaluable implications for research in climate, water resource management, and disaster risk reduction. To reach sub-picometer displacement sensing precision in the millihertz range, laser interferometers rely on suppression of laser-frequency noise by several orders of magnitude. Many optical frequency stabilization methods are available with varying levels of complexity, size, and performance. In this paper, we describe the performance of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer based on a compact monolithic optic. The setup consists of a commercial fiber injector, a custom-designed pentaprism used to split and recombine the laser beam, and two photoreceivers placed at the complementary output ports of the interferometer. The structural stability of the prism is transferred to the laser frequency via amplification, integration, and feedback of the balanced-detection signal, achieving a fractional frequency instability better than 6 parts in 1013, corresponding to an interferometer pathlength stability better than 1pm/Hz. The prism was designed to host a second interferometer to interrogate the position of a test mass. This optical scheme has been dubbed "single-element dual-interferometer" or SEDI.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10747046PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s23249758DOI Listing

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