2 p ambiguity-free optical distance measurement with subnanometer precision with a novel phase-crossing low-coherence interferometer
Abstract
We report a highly accurate phase-based technique for measuring arbitrarily long optical distance with subnanometer precision. The method employs a Michelson interferometer with a pair of harmonically related light sources, one cw and the other low coherence. By slightly detuning (~2 nm) the center wavelength of the low-coherence source between scans of the target sample, we can use the phase relationship between the heterodyne signals of the cw and the low-coherence light to measure the separation between reflecting interfaces with subnanometer precision. As this technique is completely free of 2π ambiguity, an issue that plagues most phase-based techniques, it can be used to measure arbitrarily long optical distances without loss of precision. We demonstrate one application of this technique, the high-precision determination of the differential refractive index.
- Publication:
-
Optics Letters
- Pub Date:
- January 2002
- DOI:
- 10.1364/OL.27.000077
- Bibcode:
- 2002OptL...27...77Y
- Keywords:
-
- distance measurement;
- light coherence;
- Michelson interferometers;
- laser beam applications;
- heterodyne detection;
- refractive index measurement