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Atom interferometry at arbitrary orientations and rotation rates

Quentin d’Armagnac de Castanet, Cyrille Des Cognets, Romain Arguel, Simon Templier, Vincent Jarlaud, Vincent Ménoret, Bruno Desruelle, Philippe Bouyer, Baptiste Battelier

2024Nature Communications27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The exquisite precision of atom interferometers has sparked the interest of a large community for uses ranging from fundamental physics to geodesy and inertial navigation. However, their implementation for onboard applications is still limited, not least because rotation and acceleration are intertwined in a single phase shift, which makes the extraction of a useful signal more challenging. Moreover, the spatial separation of the wave packets due to rotations leads to a loss of signal. We present an atom interferometer operating over a large range of random angles, rotation rates and accelerations. A model of the expected phase shift allows us to untangle the rotation and acceleration signals. We also implement a real-time compensation system using fiber-optic gyroscopes and a rotating reference mirror to maintain the full contrast of the interferometer. We demonstrate a single-shot sensitivity to acceleration of 24 μg for rotation rates reaching 14° s−1. Cold atoms inertial sensors offer great precision and sensitivity, yet their use in mobile applications has been hindered by the effects of rotations on their measurements. Here, authors demonstrate an atom interferometer operating over a wide range of orientations and rotation rates, thanks to hybridisation with accelerometers and gyroscopes.

Topics & Concepts

GyroscopeAtom interferometerAccelerometerRotation (mathematics)PhysicsInterferometryAstronomical interferometerAccelerationSensitivity (control systems)OpticsSIGNAL (programming language)Ultracold atomInertial measurement unitInertial navigation systemInertial frame of referenceComputer scienceClassical mechanicsElectronic engineeringArtificial intelligenceEngineeringQuantum mechanicsQuantumProgramming languageCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein CondensatesAdvanced Frequency and Time StandardsAtomic and Subatomic Physics Research
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