|
1.INTRODUCTIONGRAVITY is a four-telescope beam combiner instrument for the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) at the Paranal Observatory in Chile. The K-band light from four telescopes will be combined by GRAVITY for two objects simultaneously. By that the beam combiner will not only be capable of high resolution imaging with a beam width of 4 mas but will also provide narrow-angle astrometry to a precision of 10 μas - far beyond the current limits. One of the primary science goals targeted with these capabilities will be to probe physics in the Galactic Center close to the event horizon of the supermassive black hole. There, effects predicted by the theory of general relativity are expected to take place that cannot be observed in other, less extreme environments. Dynamical measurements taken with GRAVITY’s astrometric mode are the key therefore. The idea is to observe two objects, one science and one reference target, simultaneously and to measure their angular separation by determining their so called Differential Optical Path Difference (dOPD) as illlustrated in Figure 1. However, measuring the angular separation between the targets to a precision of 10 pas not only requires to measure their dOPD to a level of a few nanometers but also all paths within the interferometer from the telescopes down to the instrument need to be maintained stable to that level. Here is where the metrology system of GRAVITY comes into play which will monitor internal dOPDs by means of phase-shifting interferometry. In the following, the basic working principle of the GRAVITY metrology system is presented. 2.THE WORKING PRINCIPLE OF THE GRAVITY METROLOGY SYSTEM2.1Narrow-angle astrometryThe underlying idea of the metrology system is to trace the optical paths of the science light within the interferometer by a laser beam, which is illustrated in Figure 2. The laser beam travels the paths in opposite directions being injected behind the beam combination facility in GRAVITY and going all the way backwards through GRAVITY and the VLTI infrastructures to the telescopes. The laser light at first is split into two equally bright beams, each of which is injected into one of the two beam combiners of the reference and science object. Before the injection a phase-shifting device is integrated in one of the beams such that in the end the interference patterns of the two beams at the telescope pupils can be sampled by phase-shifting interferometry. For this reason a four-step phase-shifting algorithm is implemented in GRAVITY which applies four phase shifts A, B, C and D accompanied by the four corresponding intensity measurements at each individual telescope. This allows reconstructing the phases of the interfering laser beams. These phases correspond to the internal dOPDs which have to be subtracted from the respective phases of the science light beams measured at the GRAVITY detectors in order to obtain the true dOPD on sky between the targets. In more detail, a short mathematical derivation, considering only two telescopes for simplicity, can show that in such a design the dOPD needs to be calculated from three types of quantities, the science phases ΨA and ΨB, measured at the detectors A and B, the metrology phases Φ1 and Φ2 at telescopes 1 and 2 as well as two terms related to the non-common path between metrology and science light, δ1 and δ2: where λA and λB denote the effective wavelengths of the light of star A and B and λL stands for the wavelength of the metrology laser. Equivalent results are obtained when calculating the general case for four telescopes with six possible baselines. The difference of the non-common path terms δ1 and δ2 will be calibrated by swapping the light of two nearby stars between the beam combiners such that the zero points of the metrology phases are found. The actual adjustment will not be applied online but in the data reduction. Thus, the relevant quantities that have to be tracked by the metrology during observations are its phases at each telescope which correspond to internal dOPDs of the interferometer between the beam combination and the telescopes. As already mentioned before, the phases of the metrology light are extracted by means of a four-step phase-shifting algorithm that shall be shortly introduced now. 2.2Four-step phase-shifting algorithmThe measurement of the internal dOPDs in the optical paths from the VLTI to the instrument GRAVITY is accomplished by determining the phases of fringe patterns that form in the pupil planes. The corresponding intensity patterns are sampled at a few points with photodiodes by applying phase shifts to one of the two metrology laser beams. Simultaneously, the resulting intensities of the shifted fringes are measured at the photodiodes, which encode the OPD information. A minimum of three phase shifts and intensity measurements respectively are necessary to determine the intensity pattern and by that the fringe phase. In this respect, the GRAVITY metrology uses four shifts with i ∊ {A, B, C, D} in order to determine the intensity distribution unambiguously denoted as ABCD algorithm. According to the theory of interference of two beams with intensities I1 and I2, the intensities measured for the individual phase steps should lie on the distribution I(x, y, αi) as a function of position (x,y) on the detection area where Φ(x, y) denotes the fringe phase. These four shifts and intensities can be written as four such equations with three unknown variables I1, I2 and Φ. Solving this system of equations for the variable of interest, the fringe phase Φ, leads to the simple relation below if the phase shifts correspond to exact multiples of : In case the phase shifts α deviate from the nominal values this formula can be generalized if the deviations are known, but it is foreseen to calibrate the nominal shifts to extract the metrology phases.3 The uncertainties in the phase extraction of the metrology enters the total astrometric error budget of GRAVITY, which is shown in the next section. 2.3Astrometric error budgetAs raised above, the simple four-step algorithm implemented in the metrology will be based on exact multiples of being applied as phase shifts. This requires a calibration of the phase-shifting device. As a consequence, the precision of this calibration enters the uncertainty of the phase measurement. Following from the error propagation of Equation 3 the phase uncertainty squared δΦ2 amounts to: assuming that the four intensity measurements have equal uncertainties δI := δIA = δIB = δIC = δID and I1 = I2 = I0. Thus, the phase uncertainty in radian is defined by the reciprocal of times the signal-to-noise ratio I0/δI. For the shortest baselines the astrometric error budget leaves roughly a few nanometers to the phase measurement accuracy within 5 minutes, such that all individual uncertainties introduced by the devices involved in this measurement should amount to fractions of this value including the error coming from the calibration of the phase shifter. Table 1 demonstrates the influence of the phase shifter calibration errors of order λ/4000, λ/2000 and λ/1000 on the astrometric error budget. The goal therefore is to calibrate the phase shifter to a nm-level of accuracy or even lower in order to reach the specified astrometric precision. Table 1.Influence of the phase shifter calibration error on the astrometric error of GRAVITY. The numbers correspond to the observation case with four VLTI Unit Telescopes (UTs) during a period of 5 min. The phase shifter calibration error is one of several terms, such as the performance of the metrology laser and receivers, that enters the total metrology phase extraction error. The latter also adds up quadratically with other errors to a total GRAVITY OPD error term which can be translated into an astrometric error. A phase shifter calibration error of 2 nm would dominate the total phase extraction error of the metrology which then would become the second largest contribution to the astrometric error.
Before the details of developing an appropriate calibration routine are presented, the properties of the phase-shifting device used for the GRAVITY metrology are summarized. 3.CALIBRATION OF THE PHASE SHIFTER3.1Phase shifterOur phase-shifting device of type MPX2000-LN-0.1 displayed in Figure 3 is a component from Photline Technologies. The phase modulation of optical signals is based on a birefringent lithium niobate crystal (LiNbO3). The refractive index of this material can be varied in proportion to the strength of an applied electric field. Thus, the phase of an electro-magnetic wave passing the crystal can be influenced by setting a voltage. On the surface of the crystal a waveguide is implemented by titanium diffusion. This diffusion zone leads to an increase of the refractive index such that total internal reflection keeps the injected light within the waveguide.4 The manufacturer’s specifications of the device are given in Table 2 together with the corresponding requirements from the GRAVITY metrology design. Table 2.Specifications of the phase shifter. The device is designed for wavelengths between 1900 nm and 2200 nm. The electro-optic bandwidth of the phase shifter amounts to 150 MHz and the modulation range is specified from -20 V to 20 V. For the GRAVITY metrology roughly 0 V to 10 V are used which correspond to a full wave for a wavelength of 2000 nm and a bandwidth of 4 kHz is foreseen to operate system. Long-term tests showed that the injected power level of 0.85 W is withstood by the component although it is specified for a maximum input of 0.1 W by the manufacturer Photline Technologies.
The birefringent crystal has two transmission axes with different refractive indices. Since the metrology laser light is polarized and guided in PM fibers, the polarization can be maintained in this respect when being aligned to one of these axes. Due to the presence of several connectors in the metrology fiber chain small misalignments can occur. For this reason, we spliced fiber polarizers to the input and output of the phase shifter to correct for these mismatches. The phase-shifting concept of the metrology system used to determine internal dOPDs in the GRAVITY interferometer requires that the accuracy of the applied phase shifts should be of order 1 nm or less. In practical terms, this means that the translation between the voltage applied to the phase shifter and the resulting phase shift has to be known to that level. This relation can be measured in an interferometric test setup. In order to determine the relation between the applied voltage and resulting phase shift we tested two methods, a linear scan of a full wave and a phase-step insensitive algorithm, both of which will be presented here. 3.2Linear scanIn a first simple approach, the main idea was to scan the range of a full wave by setting a linear voltage ramp from 0 V to 10 V in an interferometric test setup, which is drawn on the left side of Figure 6. As in the final metrology design, the laser light is split into two channels of which one is feeding the phase shifter. Then the beams are combined again and the interferometric signal is read out with a receiver using the same type of photodiodes as our final design. We average over a few hundred linear scans as in Figure 4, at the maximum rate of 500 Hz given by the response of our receiver design, to extract the intensity distribution of the interference pattern. Fitting a function of the following shape to the acquired data allows to model the desired relation between voltage U and phase shift α: The quantities I1 and I2(U) correspond to the transmission functions of the two interfering beams. The intensity I1 denotes the transmission of the unmodulated arm. The intensity I2 is the transmission of the phase-shifted arm. It turns out that the transmission of the phase shifter depends on the applied voltage, i. e. is not independent of the applied phase step. We measure I1 and I2(U) with linear scans by disconnecting one of the interfering fiber chains before we do the actual fringe measurement. ξ and ν are parameters which we have to introduce to adjust the bias and contrast of I which are not perfectly reconstructed by the previously measured I1 and I2(U). If the relation α(U) of the phase shifter is linear, the intensity is a simple sine function and the four required voltages for the ABCD phase shifts are therefore easy to derive. However, phase-shifting devices can show non-linearities like the Kerr effect such that the function α(U) is of more complicated shape as in our case where a polynomial of 4th order is needed to fit the measured intensity distribution. This and other effects observed during the measurements strongly limit the achievable accuracy of the phase shifter calibration error and make the related analysis of the measured data complicated. As a summary the limiting factors in our measurements were the following:
These effects need to be taken into account when modeling the fitting function used for the measured intensity distribution. In this approach, we were able to determine phase shifts with a typical accuracy of 2 nm correcting for the non-linear transmission function and the fringe drifts, however under the assumption that our model function I(U) and in particular α(U) describe reality well. Thus, our main concerns were:
These results caused us to investigate other calibration methods which are less affected by non-linearities. We were able to overcome the main drawbacks mentioned above by using a phase-step insensitive algorithm discussed in the next section. 3.3Phase-step insensitive algorithmThe basic idea behind the phase-step insensitive approach is to shift by the four values instantaneously that we believe to be close to the required ABCD phase shifts, namely {0 V, 2 V, 4 V, 6 V} since a full wave is scanned by approximately 8 V for our wavelength. In this manner, we directly probe the phase shifts and the phase shifter non-linearities as well as environmental instabilities can be neglected, such that a fixed correlation is kept between the different steps or voltages applied to the component. With the phase shifter in one arm of the setup and a delay line in the other, as shown on the right in Figure 6, we used this fact to determine our desired ABCD steps with a phase-step insensitive method. The delay line can be used to slowly move the phase in order to scan the fringes while the phase shifter is constantly repeating approximate ABCD steps for each delay line shift. The correlation of the instantaneous ABCD shifts remains fixed independently of the delay line phase. In this manner, one obtains four intensity distributions I with i ∊ {A, B, C, D} as a function of the delay line phase β: where the parameters ai correspond to the intensity offsets and bi to the amplitudes of the intensity modulation. These functions have the form of Cartesian coordinates of an ellipse in its parametric form. Plotting couples of these intensity distributions, Ii and Ij, against each other will result in an elliptic figure with a shape depending on different parameters of the system such as flux and phase shift Δij = αi – αj. The data can be fitted by the ellipse equation in Cartesian coordinates with the coefficients (E, F, G, H, K, L), which allows for calculating the phase step Δij by the following formula:5 The parameters (E, F, G, H, K, L) can be written as L is fixed to be 1 in order to avoid that the parameters shrink to zero in the χ2-minimization that we run in order to find the parameters ai, aj, bi, bj and Δij such that equation 8 tends to zero. It is also possible to fit the coefficients (E, F, G, H, K, L) by direct analytical methods as demonstrated by Fitzgibbon et al. (1996)6 but with severe drawbacks:
In this basic model we include the laser power fluctuations during the measurements P(t), which can be extracted from a Fourier transform of the ABCD modulation of our measurements. The measured transmission variation of the phase shifter used as delay line as a function of applied voltage lies within the frequency of the laser power fluctuations such that it is filtered out by P(t). Therefore, our final model is the following expression With this function we determine the phase angles Δab, ΔBC and ΔCD in our experiment. In more detail, we apply linear voltage ramps consisting of 1000 phase steps of about 4 nm to the phase shifter which is used as delay line. Due to the natural fringe drift this realization of a delay line is not limited by discrete voltage sampling. The ABCD modulation is run at frequencies close to 1 kHz. The fringe drift typically occurs at 0.1 nm/ms such that during an ABCD cycle the drift is smaller than 0.3 nm ≃ λ/6000 and has no significant influence on our measurement of the ABCD phase angles. We took series of measurements at different ABCD frequencies in the range between 0.5 kHz and 1.5 kHz and different dates few months from each other without specific control of the environment to extract the phase shifter calibration error of this phase-step insensitive algorithm. Typically, the measured phase shifts are consistent within 0.2° or 1 nm between the series which also is the typical dispersion on each individual series of measurements. These results validate that the phase-step insensitive algorithm is an appropriate method to calibrate the ABCD phase steps for the metrology on a 1 nm-level. In comparison to the method of linearly scanning a full wave with the phase shifter, we not only achieve a precision of factor two higher, but we are also able to extract phase angles unambiguously. The advantage is that we do not need to model the interference fringes including the various complex effects that let the intensity distribution strongly differ compared to the theory of simple two-beam interference. The deficiencies of the linear scan method become obvious when directly comparing the results of both algorithms tested in Table 3. In Figure 7 the determined phase steps ΔAB of one such series are shown as well as one of the respective ellipses together with the corresponding fit and residuals. Table 3.Results of the phase-step insensitive algorithm compared to the linear scan. For the phase-step insensitive method the average phase shift values ΔAB, ΔBC and ΔCD were obtained from series of measurements at different ABCD modulation frequencies and different dates during a time span of a few months. The absolute value of the applied voltage steps always is 2 V, but results in different phase angles due to the non-linear behavior of the phase shifter. Obviously, the linear scan shows systematically different as well as less precise results and fails in revealing the non-linearities probably due to flaws of the respective fit model.
4.CONCLUSIONSThe calibration of the metrology phase shifter presented here fulfills the specified requirements for performing 10 as-level astrometry. We could demonstrate experimentally that ABCD phase shifts can be calibrated with an accuracy of typically 1 nm in a stable setup and environment. Despite non-linearities that occur in the component, the metrology fiber chain or in the environment we were able to elaborate a method that is not as sensitive to these as simple scans of fringes in order to extract the relation between the applied voltage and the resulting phase shift. The phase-step insensitive algorithm is able to determine phases unambiguously when a robust fitting routine for ellipses is included. In our case a χ2-minimization serves this purpose. These results were achieved under normal air pressure and room temperature. In GRAVITY the phase shifter is going to be operated in vacuum at 10-6 mbar cooled to 240 K – conditions which might lead to a higher calibration accuracy provided that the instrument does not introduce higher noise levels. Currently, we analyze the instrument’s behavior in this respect. Furthermore, fiber differential delay lines are implemented in GRAVITY which can be used for the calibration of phase shifts and do not show a transmission dependency as the phase shifter. However, due to the transmission modulation of the phase shifter we might need to adapt the original phase extraction formula of Equation 3, since the underlying fringe model of Equation 2 does not take this effect into account. When the ABCD phase shifts will be calibrated to the specified accuracy within GRAVITY, an important step will be taken towards measuring the optical paths in the interferometer to a nm-level precision via phase-shifting interferometry and thus towards unprecedented astrometric errors at the level of 10 μas. REFERENCESGlindemann, A., Principles of Stellar Interferometry, Springer-Verlag, Berlin Heidelberg
(2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-15028-9 Google Scholar
Gillessen, S. et al.,
“GRAVITY: metrology,”
in Proc. SPIE,
84451O https://doi.org/10.1117/12.926813 Google Scholar
Sahlmann, J. et al.,
“The prima fringe sensor unit,”
Astronomy & Astrophysics, 507
(3), 1739
–1757
(2009). https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/200912271 Google Scholar
Wooten, E. L. et al.,
“A review of lithium niobate modulators for fiber-optic communications systems,”
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics, 6
(1), 69
–82
(2000). https://doi.org/10.1109/2944.826874 Google Scholar
Farrell, C. T. and Player, M. A.,
“Phase-step insensitive algorithms for phase-shifting interferometry,”
Measurement Science and Technology, 5 648
–652
(1994). https://doi.org/10.1088/0957-0233/5/6/003 Google Scholar
Fitzgibbon, A., Pilu, M., and Fisher, R. B.,
“Direct least square fitting of ellipses,”
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, 476
–480
(1999). https://doi.org/10.1109/34.765658 Google Scholar
|