Low noise, high bandwidth, high sensitivity laser seismometer

US10247850B1 · US · B1

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-10247850-B1
Application numberUS-201715709763-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB1
Filing dateSep 20, 2017
Priority dateSep 27, 2016
Publication dateApr 2, 2019
Grant dateApr 2, 2019

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

A laser seismometer may measure the change in a phase modulated optical signal. Unlike traditional interferometers, the laser phase is first modulated by a radio frequency (RF) source, which is then demodulated following detection to provide the signal of interest. The net result is a direct measurement of displacement with the effects of amplitude noise eliminated via limiting and the effects of 1/f phase noise (frequency drift, etc.) eliminated by self-interfering the signal. Because the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the optical signal is strong, the technique provides a strong measure of the displacement and avoids the extremely low voltages and associated problems of traditional sensors.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

The invention claimed is: 1. An apparatus, comprising: a stationary proof mass; a moving mass; a laser configured to emit light; a beamsplitter; a phase modulator located on an optical path between the beamsplitter and the stationary proof mass; a radio frequency splitter; and a signal generator configured to generate a sinusoidal signal at radio frequencies that pass through the radio frequency splitter and drive the phase modulator, wherein the laser, the beamsplitter, and the phase modulator are configured such that: light emitted from the laser is run through the beamsplitter and split into a first beam and a second beam, the first beam strikes and reflects off of the moving mass, and at least some of the reflected first beam passes back through the beamsplitter, the second beam passes through the phase modulator and reflects off of the stationary proof mass, and at least some of the reflected second beam passes back through the phase modulator and, along with the sinusoidal signal generated by the signal generator, is recombined at the beamsplitter with the reflected light from the first beam to generate a combined interfered signal. 2. The apparatus of claim 1 , further comprising: an optical detector configured to receive the combined interfered signal from the beamsplitter. 3. The apparatus of claim 2 , wherein the optical detector is positioned such that the combined interfered signal interacts with the optical detector to produce a signal identifiable by a frequency-modulated radio frequency signal at baseband, with a modulation index of k=1. 4. The apparatus of claim 3 , wherein the signal produced by the optical detector comprises a direct current offset with the phase component appearing as a sideband at a modulation frequency of ±ω′. 5. The apparatus of claim 3 , further comprising: a low noise amplifier (LNA) that receives and amplifies the signal produced by the optical detector; a filter that receives the amplified signal from the LNA and removes a DC component thereof; and a limiting amplifier that receives the filtered signal from the filter and removes all amplitude-noise effects, leaving only a signal of interest. 6. The apparatus of claim 5 , further comprising: an IQ mixer that receives the signal from the limiting amplifier and removes phase noise associated with a radio frequency source using a phase modulation signal sin(ω′t) as a local oscillator (LO), wherein a resulting IQ signal gives, after filtering, a phase component 2kΔr corresponding to a difference in displacement. 7. The apparatus of claim 1 , wherein the phase modulator changes a phase of the reflected second beam by changing an index of refraction of a material of the phase modulator, adding a time delay as the reflected second beam passes through the material. 8. A phase modulated seismic interferometer, comprising: a beamsplitter that splits an optical signal into a first beam and a second beam; a phase modulator located on an optical path between the beamsplitter and a stationary proof mass, the phase modulator configured such that light from the second beam passes through the phase modulator and reflects off of the stationary proof mass; a radio frequency splitter; and a signal generator configured to generate a sinusoidal signal at radio frequencies that pass through the radio frequency splitter and drive the phase modulator, wherein at least some of the reflected second beam passes back through the phase modulator to the beamsplitter, along with the sinusoidal signal generated by the signal generator, producing a phase-modulated signal, and the phase modulator changes a phase of the reflected second beam by changing an index of refraction of a material of the phase modulator, adding a time delay as the reflected second beam passes through the material. 9. The phase modulated seismic interferometer of claim 8 , further comprising: a moving mass positioned such that light from the first beam reflects off of the moving mass and at least some of the reflected first beam passes back through the beamsplitter, producing a combined interfered signal when combined with the phase-modulated signal. 10. The phase modulated seismic interferometer of claim 9 , further comprising: an optical detector positioned such that the combined interfered signal interacts with the optical detector to produce a signal identifiable by a frequency-modulated radio frequency signal at baseband, with a modulation index of k=1. 11. The phase modulated seismic interferometer of claim 10 , wherein the signal produced by the optical detector comprises a direct current offset with the phase component appearing as a sideband at a modulation frequency of ±ω′. 12. The phase modulated seismic interferometer of claim 11 , further comprising: a low noise amplifier (LNA) that receives and amplifies the signal produced by the optical detector; a filter that receives the amplified signal from the LNA and removes a DC component thereof; and a limiting amplifier that receives the filtered signal from the filter and removes all amplitude-noise effects, leaving only a signal of interest. 13. The phase modulated seismic interferometer of claim 12 , further comprising: an IQ mixer that receives the signal from the limiting amplifier and removes phase noise associated with a radio frequency source using a phase modulation signal sin(ω′t) as a local oscillator (LO), wherein a resulting IQ signal gives, after filtering, a phase component 2kΔr corresponding to a difference in displacement. 14. A phase modulated seismic interferometer, comprising: a beamsplitter that splits light into a first beam and a second beam; a phase modulator; a radio frequency splitter; a signal generator configured to generate a sinusoidal signal at radio frequencies that pass through the radio frequency splitter and drive the phase modulator, the phase modulator located on an optical path between the beamsplitter and a stationary proof mass, the phase modulator configured such that light from the second beam passes through the phase modulator and reflects off of the stationary proof mass and at least some of the reflected second beam passes back through the phase modulator to the beamsplitter, along with the sinusoidal signal generated by the signal generator, producing a phase-modulated signal; a moving mass positioned such that light from the first beam reflects off of the moving mass and at least some of the reflected first beam passes back through the beamsplitter, producing a combined interfered signal when combined with the phase-modulated signal; and an optical detector positioned such that the combined interfered signal interacts with the optical detector to produce a signal identifiable by a frequency-modulated radio frequency signal at baseband, with a modulation index of k=1. 15. The phase modulated seismic interferometer of claim 14 , further comprising: a low noise amplifier (LNA) that receives and amplifies the signal produced by the optical detector; a filter that receives the amplified signal from the LNA and removes a DC component thereof; and a limiting amplifier that receives the filtered signal from the filter and removes all amplitude-noise effects, leaving only a signal of interest. 16. The phase modulated seismic interferometer of claim 15 , further comprising: an IQ mixer that receives the signal from the limiting amplifier and removes phase noise associated with a radio frequency source using a phase modulation signal sin(ω′t) as a local oscillator (LO), wherein a resulting IQ signal gives, aft

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • G01V8/14Primary

    using reflectors · CPC title

  • G01V1/18Primary

    Receiving elements, e.g. seismometer, geophone {or torque detectors, for localised single point measurements} · CPC title

  • using fibre optic sensors (light guides per se G02B6/00, acousto-optical devices specially adapted for gating or modulating in optical wave guides G02F1/125) · CPC title

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What does patent US10247850B1 cover?
A laser seismometer may measure the change in a phase modulated optical signal. Unlike traditional interferometers, the laser phase is first modulated by a radio frequency (RF) source, which is then demodulated following detection to provide the signal of interest. The net result is a direct measurement of displacement with the effects of amplitude noise eliminated via limiting and the effects …
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Triad Nat Security Llc
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification G01V8/14. Mapped technology areas include Physics.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Apr 02 2019 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B1). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 8 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).