Polarization Separated Phase Shifted Interferometer

A polarization-separated, phase-shifted interferometer can generate interferograms without moving parts. It uses a phase shifter, such as an electro-optic phase modulator, to modulate the relative phase between sample and reference beams. These beams are transformed into orthogonal polarization states (e.g., horizontally and vertically polarized states) and coupled via a common path (e.g., polarization-maintaining fiber) to a polarizing beam splitter (PBS), which sends them into separate sample and reference arms. Quarter-wave plates in the sample and reference arms rotate the polarization states of the sample and reference beams so they are coupled out of the PBS to a detector via a 45° linear polarizer. The polarizer projects the aligned polarization components of the sample and reference beams onto the detector, where they interfere with known relative phase to produce an output that can be used to map surface topography of the test object.

Researchers

Noah Gilbert / Joshua Brown

Technology Areas: Electronics & Photonics: Photonics / Industrial Engineering & Automation: Autonomous Systems
Impact Areas: Connected World

  • polarization separated phase shifted interferometer
    United States of America | Granted | 12,000,698

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