Time-of-flight measurement with femtosecond light pulses

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The time-of-flight of light pulses has long been used as a direct measure of distance(1,2), but state-of-the-art measurement precision using conventional light pulses or microwaves peaks at only several hundreds of micrometres(3,4). Here, we improve the time-of-flight precision to the nanometre regime by timing femtosecond pulses through phase-locking control of the pulse repetition rate using the optical cross-correlation technique(5,6). Our experiment shows an Allan deviation of 117 nm in measuring a 0.7-km distance in air at a sampling rate of 5 ms once the pulse repetition is phase-locked, which reduces to 7 nm as the averaging time increases to 1 s. This enhanced capability is maintained at long range without periodic ambiguity, and is well suited to lidar applications such as geodetic surveying(7), range finders(8) and absolute altimeters(9). This method could also be applied to future space missions involving formation-flying satellites for synthetic aperture imaging(10,11) and remote experiments related to general relativity theory(12).
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Issue Date
2010-10
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

NATURE PHOTONICS, v.4, no.10, pp.716 - 720

ISSN
1749-4885
DOI
10.1038/NPHOTON.2010.175
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/100430
Appears in Collection
ME-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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