Claims
- 1. A sensor for optically sensing air borne acoustic waves from a remote source, comprising:(a) means for producing mutually coherent optical sampling and reference beams, which may be combined to form a heterodyne or homodyne intermediate frequency carrier, said sampling beam having a cross section which is small in relation to the acoustic wave lengths of interest, (b) optical means for defining a path for said sampling beam including an aperture through which the sampling beam enters the air in which acoustic waves are borne, and through which any light from said sampling beam passes after reflection, said aperture having a cross section which is small in relation to the acoustic wave lengths of interest, (c) light reflective means arranged in said path for reflecting significant sampling beam energy back via said aperture, said sampling beam path being oriented with a substantial component parallel to the acoustic wavefronts of interest, so that the sampling beam is exposed to an acoustic wave induced density variation of like amplitude over a substantial portion of said path, said density variation producing a variation in the index of refraction, and thereupon phase modulation of the sampling beam in proportion to the accumulated variation in the index of refraction over said beam path, (d) an optical detector including optical means for coherently combining said reflected sampling beam with said reference beam to form an electrical carrier, phase modulated as a result of said variation in the index of refracton and (e) a phase detector coupled to the output of said optical detector for detecting the acoustic wave induced phase variation of said sampling beam and thereby recovering an electrical signal representative of the acoustic waves.
- 2. A sensor as set forth in claim 1 whereinsaid light reflective means is a specular, retro-reflector, adjusted to reflect said beam back via said aperture.
- 3. In combination,A. a plurality of sensors for optically sensing air borne acoustic waves along the boundaries of an area, each sensor comprising: (a) means for producing mutually coherent, optical sampling and reference beams, which may be combined to form a heterodyne or homodyne intermediate frequency carrier, (b) optical means for defining a path for said sampling beam including an aperture through which the sampling beam enters the air in which acoustic waves are borne, and through which any light from said sampling beam passes after reflection, said aperture having a cross section which is small in relation to the acoustic wave lengths of interest, (c) a specular, retro-reflector arranged in said path for reflecting the sampling beam energy back via said aperture, each sampling beam path being oriented such that all acoustic sources along said beam path produce acoustic wavefronts tangential to said beam path, so that the sampling beam is exposed to an acoustic wave induced density variation of like amplitude over a portion of said path, said density variation producing a variation in the index of refraction, and thereupon phase modulation of the sampling beam in proportion to the accumulated variation in the index of refraction over said beam path, (d) an optical detector including optical means for coherently combining said reflected sampling beam with said reference beam to form an electrical carrier, phase modulated as a result of said variation in the index of refracton, (e) a phase detector coupled to the output of said optical detector for detecting the acoustic wave induced phase variation of said sampling beam and thereby producing an electrical signal representative of the acoustic waves; and wherein B. each sensor is arranged so that the beam paths collectively form a closed polygon embracing said area.
RELATED APPLICATION
The present invention is related to the application of Monsay, Penn, and Winfield, assigned to the Assignee of the present application, and entitled “Sensor And An Array of Sensors For Optically Sensing Water Borne Acoustic Waves” (35-HE-1514), Ser. No. 864,260 filed concurrently herewith on May 19, 1987.
US Referenced Citations (4)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry |
R. Kristal, “Bragg Cell Heterodyne Interferometry of Fast Plasma Events”, Nov. 1976.* |
“On the Feasibility of Detecting Low Level Acoustic Signals in the Ocean by Use of a Laser Heterodyne Detector” by Sam Hanish (NRL Memorandum Report 3319) by the Naval Research Laboratory, dated Mar. 1, 1976. |