Rotation and acceleration sensor based on nondegenerate ring lasers
10386187 ยท 2019-08-20
Assignee
Inventors
- Selim M. Shahriar (Kildeer, IL, US)
- Nicholas J. Condon (Evanston, IL, US)
- Devin J. Hileman (Des Plaines, IL, US)
- Shih C. Tseng (Arlington Heights, IL, US)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
Ring laser gyroscopes, in which rotation is detected by the Sagnac effect between counterpropagating lasers, are in common use in navigation applications. The invention disclosed here uses lasers operating at different frequencies; the resulting device is referred to as a Nondegenerate Ring Laser Gyroscope (NRLG). The invention disclosed here also incorporates an acceleration-sensing element that modifies the path length of the ring lasers in the gyroscope, the effects of which on the output of the gyroscope can be separated from those of rotation. The resulting composite device is a Nondegnerate Ring Laser Gyroscope/Accelerometer (NRLGA).
Claims
1. A device comprising: two counter propagating ring lasers sharing a common cavity, wherein the lasers are generated using a resonant Raman process in an alkali metal vapor, wherein the cavity contains a mirror mounted on an acceleration-sensitive element to generate acceleration detection; and an optical pump module, wherein the optical pump module includes a first 780 nm Distributed Bragg Reflector laser and a second 780 nm DBR laser, wherein the output of the first 780 nm DBR laser is locked to an .sup.85Rb absorption transition, wherein the output of the second 780 nm DBR laser is locked to an .sup.87Rb absorption transition, wherein the output of the lasers is passed through a heated rubidium vapor cell.
2. The device according to claim 1, wherein the outputs of the two ring lasers are combined and the resulting beat frequency is measured by a readout module, wherein the readout module includes a clockwise demodulator for receiving the clockwise resonant Raman laser signal and a counter clockwise demodulator for receiving a counter clockwise resonant Raman laser signal, wherein the readout module determines the difference in frequency between the clockwise demodulator and counter clockwise demodulator.
3. The device according to claim 1, wherein the device is used to measure rotational rate by a readout module, wherein the readout module includes a clockwise demodulator for receiving the a clockwise Raman laser signal and a counter clockwise demodulator for receiving a counter clockwise resonant Raman laser signal, wherein the readout module determines the difference in frequency between the clockwise demodulator and counter clockwise demodulator, wherein the difference is proportional to the rotational rate of the ring laser, wherein the readout module generates a gyroscope signal based on the difference.
4. The device according to claim 3, wherein the device is used to measure rotation and acceleration simultaneously.
5. The device according to claim 1, wherein the two lasers are operated at different frequencies.
6. The device according to claim 1, wherein the mirror mounted on an acceleration-sensitive element to generate acceleration detection is a mirror attached to a MEMS-fabricated spring, wherein motion of the mirror is used to measure acceleration.
7. A combined nondegenerate ring laser gyroscope and accelerometer device comprising: a clockwise resonant Raman laser pump module; a counter clockwise resonant Raman laser pump module; an optical pump module; a ring laser module including a laser gain medium, wherein the laser gain medium is the vapor of an alkali metal element; and a readout module, wherein the output from the clockwise resonant Raman laser pump module and the counter clockwise resonant Raman laser pump module combine with one of the two optical pump outputs on a dichroic beam combiner to form a combined set of beams, wherein the ring laser module receives the combined set of beams in a single cavity, wherein the ring laser module generates a pair of counter-propagating resonant Raman lasers in a single cavity, wherein the cavity contains a mirror mounted on an acceleration-sensitive element to generate acceleration detection, wherein the readout module receives the output of the ring laser module to produce a desired rotation and acceleration signal, wherein the optical pump module includes a first 780 nm Distributed Bragg Reflector laser and a second 780 nm DBR laser, wherein the output of the first 780 nm DBR laser is locked to an .sup.85Rb absorption transition, wherein the output of the second 780 nm DBR laser is locked to an .sup.87Rb absorption transition, wherein the output of the lasers is passed through a heated rubidium vapor cell.
8. The device of claim 7, wherein the clockwise resonant Raman laser pump module and the counter clockwise resonant Raman laser pump module produce an output of 795 nm.
9. The device of claim 7, wherein the ring laser module includes three mirrors defining a triangular cavity, wherein the mirror mounted on an acceleration-sensitive element is a gold mirror on MEMS-fabricated springs, wherein a second mirror is a high reflector attached to a PZT cylinder, wherein a third mirror is a concave output coupler.
10. The device of claim 7, wherein the ring laser module includes two rubidium vapor cells, wherein the output of the clockwise resonant Raman laser pump module passes through a first rubidium vapor cell, and the output of the counter clockwise resonant Raman laser pump module pass through a second rubidium vapor cell.
11. The device of claim 7, wherein the readout module includes a counter clockwise length demodulator and a clockwise length demodulator, wherein the readout module determines the difference in signal between the clockwise and counter clockwise demodulators, wherein the readout module provides a measure of the cavity length change due to movement of the MEMS-mounted mirror based on the difference.
12. The device of claim 7, wherein the readout module generates a gyroscope signal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) A more complete appreciation of the invention will be readily obtained by reference to the following Description of the Preferred Embodiments.
(2)
(3)
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(4) A schematic of the energy levels and pumping scheme used to generate lasing in this invention are shown in
(5) To detect the NRLG signal, the outputs of the two Raman lasers are mixed on a photodetector. The output of the detector is then mixed with a VCO at a frequency that is the sum of the values of F.sub.os for the two directions, which is equal to the FSR of the cavity, and sent through a low-pass filter to eliminate the sum frequency. A voltage proportional to the output frequency would be generated by using the well-known PLL-FM demodulation technique (PLL: Phase-locked-loop; FM: Frequency Modulation). The sign of the rotation can be determined, for example, by changing the frequency of the VCO in one direction and monitoring the corresponding increase (for one sign) or decrease (for the other sign) in the final output signal.
(6) For long observation periods, or for applications demanding extreme precision, fluctuations in the cavity length cannot be ignored. A change in the cavity length will produce a shift in the resonance frequency for each mode, and the corresponding change in the FSR. In order to account for and rectify errors resulting from such a change, it is necessary to employ the following common-mode rejection servo mechanism, made possible by the fact that the SRLG excitation beams include lasers locked to absolute frequency references. First, for each direction, we will detect the beat signal between the Raman pump and a small part of the Raman laser output, while the rest of the outputs of the Raman lasers will continue to be used for detecting and processing the beat signal between them. This beat frequency is converted to a voltage using a PLL-FM demodulator. We denote as f.sub.m (f.sub.m1) the resulting voltage signal for the clock-wise (counter-clock-wise) laser. Furthermore, we define the signals f.sub.m+f.sub.m1 and f.sub.mf.sub.m1, which can be easily generated. Consider now a situation where the sum of the two Raman laser frequencies have changed by an amount that corresponds to a voltage signal .sub.CM due to a change in the cavity length (a common-mode effect), and the difference between the two Raman laser frequencies have changed by an amount that corresponds to a voltage signal .sub.SE due to the Sagnac effect (i.e., rotation). A straight-forward analysis shows that .sub.SE=Z[(2m1)] and .sub.CM=Z[(2m1)], where Z=(2m1)/[(2m1).sup.21]. For m>>1, this simplifies to .sub.SE(+/2m), and .sub.CM(+/2m), each of which can be generated as a voltage signal, given the determined value of m. The value of .sub.CM will be used as a feedback signal to correct for the fluctuations in the cavity length, producing the condition that .sub.CM=0. Under this condition, we then also get .sub.SE=(14/m.sup.2). However, in order to ensure that the quantum noise in the final NRLG signal is from the Raman lasers only, we will use the output of the detection system which involves mixing of the Raman lasers only.
(7) The schematic for a combined nondegenerate ring laser gyroscope and accelerometer (NLRGA) is shown in the five parts of
(8) The two Raman pump modules are functionally identical, differing only in the frequency offsets provided to the lasers. The schematic of one Raman pump module is shown in
(9) The optical pumps for the clockwise and the counterclockwise laser are provided by the two outputs of the optical pump modules, shown in
(10) The heart of the NLRGA is the ring laser module, a schematic of which is shown in
(11) The readout module measures the frequency differences induced in the two output lasers in order to extract the rotation rate and linear acceleration experienced by the ring laser module; a schematic of this module is shown in
CITED WORKS
(12) [1] W. M. Macek and D. T. M. Davis, Rotation Rate Sensing With Traveling Wave Ring Lasers, Applied Physics Letters, vol. 2, pp. 67-68, 1963. [2] F. Zarinetchi and S. Ezekiel, Observation of lock-in behavior in a passive resonator gyroscope, Optics Letters, vol. 11, pp. 401-403, Jan. 6, 1986 1986. [3] R. B. Hurst, N. Rabeendran, K. U. Schreiber, and J.-P. R. Wells, Correction of backscatter-induced systematic errors in ring laser gyroscopes, Applied Optics, vol. 53, pp. 7610-7618, Jan. 11, 2014 2014. [4] S. Tadigadapa and K. Mateti, Piezoelectric MEMS sensors: state-of-the-art and perspectives, Measurement Science and Technology, vol. 20, p. 092001, 2009.