Absolute distance measurement in a combined-dispersive interferometer using a femtosecond pulse laser

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Abstract

In this paper, a ranging system using dispersive interferometry is developed with a femtosecond pulse laser, aiming to eliminate the measurement dead zones by using a greatly unbalanced Mach-Zehnder interferometer. The distance can be measured by the frequency of the spectral modulation. We indicate that the integer number of the pulse-to-pulse length can be determined by changing the repetition frequency. In the short distance measurement, the results show an agreement within 1.5 μm compared with an incremental He-Ne laser in the 1 m measurement range. We do large-scale experiments on a long optical rail using a typical Michelson interferometer, and an agreement well within 25 μm is obtained in a range up to 75 m, corresponding to a relative precision of 3.3 x10-7. Additionally, we experimentally optimize the system set-up to minimize the measurement uncertainty.

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Wu, H., Zhang, F., Meng, F., Liu, T., Li, J., Pan, L., & Qu, X. (2015). Absolute distance measurement in a combined-dispersive interferometer using a femtosecond pulse laser. Measurement Science and Technology, 27(1). https://doi.org/10.1088/0957-0233/27/1/015202

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