English

Operating an atom interferometer beyond its linear range

Atomic Physics 2009-01-06 v1

Abstract

In this paper, we show that an atom interferometer inertial sensor, when associated to the auxiliary measurement of external vibrations, can be operated beyond its linear range and still keep a high acceleration sensitivity. We propose and compare two measurement procedures (fringe fitting and nonlinear lock) that can be used to extract the mean phase of the interferometer when the interferometer phase fluctuations exceed 2π2\pi. Despite operating in the urban environment of inner Paris without any vibration isolation, the use of a low noise seismometer for the measurement of ground vibrations allows our atom gravimeter to reach at night a sensitivity as good as 5.5×1085.5\times10^{-8}g at 1 s. Robustness of the measurement to large vibration noise is also demonstrated by the ability of our gravimeter to operate during an earthquake with excellent sensitivity. Our high repetition rate allows for recovering the true low frequency seismic vibrations, ensuring proper averaging. Such techniques open new perspectives for applications in other fields, such as navigation and geophysics.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0806.0164,
  title  = {Operating an atom interferometer beyond its linear range},
  author = {Sébastien Merlet and J. Le Gouët and Quentin Bodart and Andre Clairon and Arnaud Landragin and Franck Pereira Dos Santos and Pierre Rouchon},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0806.0164},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

20 pages, 8 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:46:17.972Z