Ultra-stable control near the EP in non-Hermitian systems and high-precision angular rate sensing applications

In non-Hermitian systems, enhancing sensitivity under exceptional point (EP) conditions offers an ideal solution for reconciling the trade-off between sensitivity and size constraints in sensing applications. However, practical application is limited by undesired sensitivity to external fluctuations...

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Veröffentlicht in:Optics express 2024-01, Vol.32 (1), p.79-91
Hauptverfasser: Tao, Yu, Liu, WenYao, Wang, ShiXian, Nan, Chaoming, Liu, Lai, Bai, Yu, Zhou, YanRu, Xing, EnBo, Tang, Jun, Liu, Jun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In non-Hermitian systems, enhancing sensitivity under exceptional point (EP) conditions offers an ideal solution for reconciling the trade-off between sensitivity and size constraints in sensing applications. However, practical application is limited by undesired sensitivity to external fluctuations, noise, and errors in signal amplification synchronization. This paper presents a precisely controlled EP tracking and detection system (EPTDS) that achieves long-term rapid tracking and locking near the EP by constructing a second-order non-Hermitian optical sensing unit, employing an optical power adaptive control method, and utilizing a combinatorial demodulation-based dual-loop cascaded control (CDCC) technique to selectively suppress traditional noise at different frequencies. The system locking time is 10 ms, and in room temperature conditions, the output frequency error over 1 hour is reduced by more than 30 times compared to before locking. To assess its sensing capabilities, the EPTDS undergoes testing in a rotational experiment based on the Sagnac effect, with the output bias instability based on Allan deviation measured at 0.036 /h. This is the best result for EP-enhanced angular rate sensing that we are aware of that has been reported. The EPTDS method can be extended to various sensing fields, providing a new path for transitioning non-Hermitian sensing from the laboratory to practical applications.
ISSN:1094-4087
1094-4087
DOI:10.1364/OE.506209