Conoscopic interferometry for optimal acoustic pulse detection in ultrafast acoustics
Conoscopic interferometry is a promising detection technique for ultrafast acoustics. By focusing a probe beam through a birefringent crystal before passing it through a polarizer, conoscopic interferences sculpt the spatial profile of the beam. The use of these patterns for acoustic wave detection...
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Zusammenfassung: | Conoscopic interferometry is a promising detection technique for ultrafast
acoustics. By focusing a probe beam through a birefringent crystal before
passing it through a polarizer, conoscopic interferences sculpt the spatial
profile of the beam. The use of these patterns for acoustic wave detection
revealed a higher detection sensitivity over existing techniques, such as
reflectometry and beam distortion detection. However, the physical origin of
the increased sensitivity is unknown. In this work, we present a model,
describing the sensitivity behaviour of conoscopic interferometry with respect
to the quarter-wave plate orientation and the diaphragm aperture, which is
validated experimentally. Using the model, we optimize the detection
sensitivity of conoscopic interferometry. We obtain a maximal sensitivity of
detection when placing the diaphragm edge on the dark fringes of the conoscopic
interference patterns. In the configurations studied in this work, conoscopic
interferometry can be 8x more sensitive to acoustic waves than beam distortion
detection. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2211.03145 |