The present invention relates to the field of atomic clocks.
Miniature atomic clocks (with a volume of one cm3 or less), with low electrical consumption (less than a Watt) and which allow portable applications, are devices that have been made possible by the combination of the physical CPT (coherent population trapping) or Raman principles with an atomic clock architecture based on a gas absorption cell. These two physical principles do not require any microwave cavity to interrogate the reference atoms (typically rubidium or cesium) and thus eliminate the volume constraint associated with the conventional cell-type atomic clocks. The physical part of the clock, which consists of the light source, the optical elements, the gas cell, the photodetector and all the functions such as heating and magnetic field generation, will be covered by the following deliberations. The implementation of technologies such as vertical-cavity surface-emitting semiconductor-type lasers (VCSEL), the techniques of microfabrication for the gas cells and of vacuum encapsulation have made it possible to massively reduce the volume and the electrical consumption of these atomic clocks. The VCSEL lasers offer the possibility of combining the optical pumping function and the microwave interrogation of the reference atoms. This type of laser offers the following advantages: modulation of the injection current possible up to several gigahertz, low consumption, wavelength compatible with the standard reference atoms (rubidium or cesium), excellent service life, operation at high temperature, low cost and ideally suited optical power. The silicon microstructuring technologies coupled with the methods for bonding/welding a glass substrate (typically pyrex or quartz) onto a silicon substrate make it possible to produce gas cells with dimensions much smaller than is possible to produce with the traditional glass tube blowing and forming technique. The reduction of the dimensions of the gas cell is also accompanied by a reduction in the consumption needed to heat the gas cell.
Different arrangements of the physical part of such a clock have been produced. Most of the arrangements are based on a single passage of the laser beam through the cell (see S. Knappe, MEMS atomic clocks, Book chapter in Comprehensive Microsystems, vol. 3, p. 571 (2008), Ed. Elsevier), others exploit gas cells comprising mirrors inside the cell or else allowing a double passage of the laser beam through the cell (see documents U.S. Pat. No. 7,064,835 and EP0550240). The arrangements with double passage of the light through the cell have the advantage of doubling the effective optical length of the cell and therefore improving the performance levels of the atomic clock (in terms of electrical consumption and/or of frequency stability). However, these double-passage arrangements have not been implemented for reasons of instability of the device and in particular because of disturbances to the laser evoked by the light reflected back by the mirrors onto the laser.
The documents U.S. Pat. No. 7,064,835 (Symmetricom), U.S. Pat. No. 5,340,986 (Wong) and US2009/128820 (Seiko, FIG. 6) describe the use of a splitter element in order to direct the reflected beam toward the photodetector. The light emitted by the laser is linearly polarized, converted into circular polarization by a quarter-wave plate before passage in the cell, reflection on the mirror, second passage in the cell, and detection on a photodetector.
The configurations described above present drawbacks for producing a CPT oscillator. In practice, a detector can be placed before the passage of the light in the cell and another after the double passage in the cell, but no photodetector can be positioned after a single passage of the light in the cell. This additional detector makes it possible to obtain an additional signal to that of the detector placed after the double passage. This additional signal is useful for measuring and controlling clock parameters such as the temperature of the cell or the frequency of the laser source for example. Furthermore, the configurations described above have little application in a configuration of a Raman oscillator because the control of the frequency of the laser source is performed by the same detector handling the detection of the laser beam returned from the cell.
The present invention therefore aims to propose a device for an atomic clock allowing for a double passage in the cell and which allows for easy control of the laser frequency, both for a CPT oscillator and for a Raman oscillator.
This aim is achieved by a device for an atomic clock comprising a laser source generating a laser beam, a quarter-wave plate modifying the linear polarization of the laser beam into a circular polarization and vice versa, a gas cell placed on the laser beam with circular polarization, a mirror sending the laser beam back toward the gas cell, a first photodetector, as well as means for preventing the reflected beam from reaching the laser source, characterized in that it comprises a second photodetector, placed behind the mirror, said mirror being semitransparent and allowing a portion of the laser beam to pass, said second photodetector being used to control the optical frequency of the laser and/or to control the temperature of the cell.
The invention will be better understood from the following detailed description while referring to the appended drawings in which:
a): is a schematic diagram of the CPT oscillator
b): is a schematic diagram of the Raman oscillator
a and 8b: are schematic presentations according to the first embodiment with double passage of the design of the device of the invention with straight geometry for the CPT atomic clock (8a) and the Raman oscillator (8b)
a is a schematic illustration of the CPT atomic clock comprising a laser diode 102, a λ/4 plate (or quarter-wave plate) 105, a gas cell (atomic) 106, an optional magnetic field B, a first photodetector 108, control electronics (A) and a microwave oscillator (C). The laser beam that has passed through the gas cell 106 is picked up by the first photodetector 108 and is used by the control electronics to stabilize the frequency of the laser (B) and the frequency of the microwave oscillator (C). A microwave divider (÷) generates the reference frequency requested by the end user of the device.
b is a schematic illustration of a Raman oscillator in closed loop mode comprising a laser diode 102, a λ/4 plate (or quarter-wave plate) 105, a gas cell (atomic) 106, an optional magnetic field B, a first photodetector 108, a microwave frequency divider (÷), and a radiofrequency (RF) amplifier (D). The laser beam emitted by the laser diode 102 undergoes, in the gas cell 106, a light-atom interaction which generates an additional beam, called Raman beam. The two light beams are picked up by the first photodetector 108 and the frequency beat of these two beams is amplified (D) and used as feedback on the laser to close the micro-wave loop of the Raman oscillator.
These three embodiments differ in the means used to direct the beam toward the cell and the photodetectors, and in the means used to prevent the beam reflected by the mirror from disturbing the laser source.
A more complete exemplary embodiment corresponding to the second embodiment is illustrated in
In
According to a standard embodiment, the light produced 112 by the laser 102 has a linear polarization and is attenuated by an absorbent neutral filter 104a. A different type of filter can be used in other embodiments. The presence of this filter is not necessary to the invention. A half-wave plate 104b can be used to modify the angle of the linear polarization of the laser source. In combination with the miniature cube 101, the half-wave plate 104b acts as a variable attenuator. In other embodiments, the use of the half-wave plate 104b can be omitted and the light intensity ratio between the beams transmitted and reflected by the cube 101 is adjusted by an appropriate orientation of the linear polarization axis of the light emitted by the laser relative to the splitter cube. A quarter-wave plate 105 is placed at the output of the cube against the face from which the laser beam deflected by the splitter 101 leaves, or at a right angle to the beam incident to the cube. The rapid axis of the quarter-wave plate 105 is oriented so that the incident linear polarization 113 is modified to a circular polarization 114 according to a first direction of rotation. In other embodiments, the quarter-wave plate 105 is oriented so that the incident linear polarization 113 is modified to a circular polarization according to a direction of rotation that is the reverse of the first. The laser ray of circular polarization 114 passes through the gas cell 106 and reaches the mirror 107. The latter sends only part of the ray back and a portion of the ray passes through the mirror 107 to be directed toward the photodetector 109. According to a standard embodiment, the gas cell is made of glass-silicon-glass by MEMS (micro-electromechanical system) techniques with an internal volume of typically 1 mm3 and filled with an absorbent medium of alkaline metal atomic vapor type (rubidium or cesium), and a mixture of buffer gas. According to a standard embodiment, the gas cell is filled with rubidium-87 and a mixture of nitrogen and argon as buffer gas. In other embodiments, other types of cells can be filled with different buffer gases. According to a particular embodiment, a cylindrical miniature cell can be used. According to another particular embodiment, the gas cell can be incorporated in the PBSC 101. The cell 106 can be filled with other types of alkaline metallic vapor (rubidium-85, natural rubidium, cesium-133 for example) and other types of buffer gas (Xe, Ne for example).
After its interaction with the atoms of the alkaline metal vapor, the circularly polarized light beam 114 is mostly reflected by a mirror 107. In a standard CPT embodiment, the output window of the gas cell 106 is covered with metal (silver or gold, for example) to serve as reflector. In another embodiment, the coating of the output window of the gas cell 106 may be a dielectric mirror. The transmission of the reflector 107 is chosen such that a small portion of the light is transmitted toward the photodetector 109. The back-reflected light 115 passes through and interacts a second time with the atomic medium (double passage). At the cell output, the beam passes through the quarter-wave plate 105 which transforms its circular polarization into linear polarization 116, perpendicular to the transmission axis of the polarizer 103, and is mostly transmitted by the miniature splitter cube 101. This transmitted light beam 117 reaches the photodetector 108a which stores the absorption spectrum and, more specifically, the decrease in absorption due to the coherent population trapping process (CPT). In a standard CPT embodiment, the photodetector 108a is a silicon-type photodetector. In other CPT embodiments, different types of photodetectors can be used. The minority portion 119 of the beam 116 deflected by the splitter 101 is attenuated by the polarizer 103 and thus does not disturb the laser. The second photodetector 108b stores the light beam 118 initially transmitted by the miniature splitter cube 101. In this way, the output power of the laser diode 102 can be measured and set by a dedicated control loop. The diaphragms 110 and 111 are used to avoid any undesirable light from reaching the photodetectors if the size of the laser beam is greater than the dimensions of the faces of the miniature splitter cube 101. The light stored by the photodetector 109 situated after the mirror 107 can be used for different types of control such as frequency of the laser or temperature of the cell.
In
b illustrates the schematic representation of the straight-geometry module 200 with double passage of the embodiment of the Raman oscillator according to the first embodiment. All the numeric references correspond to the model 100 of the Raman embodiment and begin with “2” instead of “1”. In the case of the Raman oscillator, the splitting percentage of the splitter cube is predefined in a way that is the reverse of that described above (CPT atomic clock of
The back-reflected light beams 115 (incident and Raman) pass through and interact a second time with the atomic medium (double passage). The quarter-wave plate 105 transforms these circularly polarized light beams into light beams of linear polarization 116. These light beams are mostly deflected 119 (incident and Raman) and reach the first photodetector 108a which stores the frequency beat between the incident beam and the Raman beam. In a standard Raman embodiment, the first photodetector 108a is a photodetector of high-speed semiconductor type (silicon or gallium arsenide) which is positioned at the focus of the concave mirror 107.
In other Raman embodiments, different types of high-speed photodetectors can be used. The second photodetector 108b stores the light 118 originating directly from the laser 102 and initially transmitted by the miniature splitter cube 101. In this way, the output power of the laser diode 102 can be measured and set by a dedicated control loop. Optionally, the photodetector 121 stores the back-reflected beam 117 transmitted by the splitter 101. The diaphragms 110 and 111 are used to prevent any undesirable light from reaching the photodetectors if their dimensions are greater than those of the miniature splitter cube 101.
It is the use of the semitransparent mirror 107 which allows for the detection of the light having interacted with the atoms of the cell by the photodetector 109. This detection by a second photodetector is particularly favorable in the case of a use of the device based on a Raman oscillator. In the case of a Raman oscillator, the photodetector 108a has a very narrow bandwidth centered around the resonant frequency of the atoms in order to maximize its signal detection effectiveness. The high atomic resonance frequency (typically >1 GHz) results in having a photodetector of small size. This specification is not compatible with a detection of the signal having interacted with the atoms of the cell to adjust the optical frequency of the laser on the resonance peak, or to adjust the temperature of the cell. In that case, a low cut-off frequency (typically <100 kHz), even DC operation, are indicated. It is therefore preferable to have two detectors, one used to detect the clock signal, the other to control the optical frequency of the laser and/or to control the temperature of the cell. The ideal means for producing this second detection of a signal having interacted with the atoms of the cell is to use a semitransparent mirror for the reflection and to place a photodetector 109 behind this mirror.
For the Raman oscillator, it is also advantageous for the mirror 107 to be of concave form as in
This arrangement is also advantageous for a clock based on a CPT principle, because the photodetector situated behind the semitransparent mirror can be used for the purposes of stabilizing the temperature of the cell containing the atoms or the frequency of the laser source.
To avoid having the beams backreflected by the mirror disturb the laser source 102, it is also advantageous to place a polarizer 103 in front of the laser source 102 and with a transmission axis parallel to the polarization of the beam emitted by the laser source 102.
Optionally, it is also possible to use the following elements:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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09405149.7 | Sep 2009 | EP | regional |
1122/10 | Jul 2010 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH2010/000215 | 9/1/2010 | WO | 00 | 6/26/2012 |