Identification and correction of Sagnac frequency variations: an implementation for the GINGERINO data analysis
-
Published:2020-02
Issue:2
Volume:80
Page:
-
ISSN:1434-6044
-
Container-title:The European Physical Journal C
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Eur. Phys. J. C
Author:
Di Virgilio Angela D. V.,Beverini Nicolò,Carelli Giorgio,Ciampini Donatella,Fuso Francesco,Giacomelli Umberto,Maccioni Enrico,Ortolan Antonello
Abstract
AbstractRing laser gyroscopes are top sensitivity inertial sensors used in the measurement of angular rotation. It is well known that the response of such remarkable instruments can in principle access the very low frequency band, but the occurrence of nonlinear effects in the laser dynamics imposes severe limitations in terms of sensitivity and stability. We report here general relationships aimed at evaluating corrections able to effectively account for nonlinear laser dynamics. The so-derived corrections are applied to analyse thirty days of continuous operation of the large area ring laser gyroscope GINGERINO leading to duly reconstruct the Sagnac frequency $$\omega _s$$ωs. The analysis shows that the evaluated corrections affect the measurement of the Earth rotation rate $$\varOmega _{\oplus }$$Ω⊕ at the level of 1 part in $$1.5\times 10^{3}$$1.5×103. The null shift term $$\omega _{ns}$$ωns plays a non negligible role. It turns out proportional to the optical losses $$\mu $$μ of the ring cavity, which are changing in time at the level of $$10\%$$10% within the considered period of thirty days. The Allan deviation of estimated $$\varOmega _{\oplus }$$Ω⊕ shows a remarkable long term stability, leading to a sensitivity better than $$10^{-10}$$10-10 rad/s with more than 10 s of integration time, and approaching $$(8.5\pm 0.5)\times 10^{-12}$$(8.5±0.5)×10-12 rad/s with $$4.5\times 10^{5}$$4.5×105 s of integration time.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous),Engineering (miscellaneous)
Reference15 articles.
1. K.U. Schreiber, J.-P.R. Wells, Invited review article: large ring lasers for rotation sensing. Rev. Sci. Instrum. 84(4), 041101 (2013) 2. A. Gauguet (ed), The Sagnac effect: 100 years later. C. R. Phys. 15(10), iii – iv (2014) 3. A. Di Virgilio, M. Allegrini, A. Beghi, J. Belfi, N. Beverini, F. Bosi, B. Bouhadef, M. Calamai, G. Carelli, D. Cuccato, E. Maccioni, A. Ortolan, G. Passeggio, A. Porzio, M.L. Ruggiero, R. Santagata, A. Tartaglia, A ring lasers array for fundamental physics. C. R. Phys. 15(10), 866–874 (2014). The Sagnac effect: 100 years later / L’effet Sagnac : 100 ans après 4. M. Tercjak, A. Brzeziński, On the influence of known diurnal and subdiurnal signals in polar motion and ut1 on ring laser gyroscope observations. Pure Appl. Geophys. 174(7), 2719–2731 (2017) 5. F. Bosi, G. Cella, A. Di Virgilio, A. Ortolan, A. Porzio, S. Solimeno, M. Cerdonio, J.P. Zendri, M. Allegrini, J. Belfi, N. Beverini, B. Bouhadef, G. Carelli, I. Ferrante, E. Maccioni, R. Passaquieti, F. Stefani, M.L. Ruggiero, A. Tartaglia, K.U. Schreiber, A. Gebauer, J.-P.R. Wells, Measuring gravitomagnetic effects by a multi-ring-laser gyroscope. Phys. Rev. D 84, 122002 (2011)
Cited by
9 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|