Interferometers are sensitive measuring devices that use the wave properties
of light to detect tiny changes in length. Physicists Michelson and
Morley ushered in the age of modern physics when their interferometer
helped show that there is no aether filling the voids between the stars
and planets. Countless other experiments have relied on interferometers
of various designs.
Now, researchers at the Universität Stuttgart have developed a
new type of interferometer that may exceed the measurement sensitivity
of older designs by as much as five hundred times. In most interferometers,
a beam of light is allowed to travel over some distance that a physicist
would like to measure. The measurement beam is then combined with a
reference beam that always travels a fixed distance. The two beams create
an interference pattern that consists of a number of bright and dark
bands, or fringes, that shift as the distance traveled by the measurement
beam changes.
The new multimode waveguide interferometer (MWI), on the other hand,
does not have a fixed reference beam. Instead, a single beam of light
enters a waveguide formed by two movable parallel mirrors. The beam
propagates as a combination of many modes, effectively following numerous
paths simultaneously through the waveguide. Each mode interferes with
every other mode, leading to a modulation in the light transmitted through
the waveguide, and a sensitive measurement of the distance between the
waveguide mirrors.
A laboratory test of the MWI resulted in detection of motion as little
as a ninth as large as the wavelength of the light that entered the
interferometer, and theoretical calculations suggest that a more refined
version could detect motion a thousand times smaller than the light
wavelength used. Conventional interferometers, by contrast, are capable
of accurately measuring distance changes only half the wavelength of
the input light or larger.
In addition to opening the door to new, high precision measurements,
MWIs may serve as fast optical switches and other communication-related
devices. But perhaps most importantly, the researchers point out, the
MWI shows that significant innovations can be surprisingly simple even
in refined and fundamental fields like classical optics. (Ovchinnikov
and Pfau, Physical Review Letters, 17 September 2001.)