APS March Meeting 2010
Volume 55, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 15–19, 2010;
Portland, Oregon
Session T4: Keithly Award Session: Precision Time and Frequency Measurements
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Room: Oregon Ballroom 204
Sponsoring
Unit:
GIMS
Chair: James Matey, United States Naval Academy
Abstract ID: BAPS.2010.MAR.T4.1
Abstract: T4.00001 : Joseph F. Keithley Award For Advances in Measurement Science Talk: Precision Noise Measurements at Microwave and Optical Frequencies*
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Eugene Ivanov
(The University of Western Australia)
The quest to detect Gravitational Waves resulted in a number of
important
developments in the fields of oscillator frequency stabilization and
precision noise measurements. This was due to the realization of
similarities between the principles of high sensitivity
measurements of weak
mechanical forces and phase/amplitude fluctuations of microwave
signals. In
both cases interferometric carrier suppression and low-noise
amplification
of the residual noise sidebands were the main factors behind
significant
improvements in the resolution of spectral measurements. In
particular,
microwave frequency discriminators with almost thermal noise limited
sensitivity were constructed leading to microwave oscillators
with more than
25dB lower phase noise than the previous state-of-the-art. High
power
solid-state microwave amplifiers offered further opportunity of
oscillator
phase noise reduction due to the increased energy stored in the
high-Q
resonator of the frequency discriminator. High power microwave
oscillators
with the phase noise spectral density close to -160dBc/Hz at 1kHz
Fourier
frequency have been recently demonstrated.
The principles of interferometric signal processing have been
applied to the
study of noise phenomena in microwave components which were
considered to be
``noise free''. This resulted in the first experimental evidence
of phase
fluctuations in microwave circulators. More efficient use of
signal power
enabled construction of the ``power recycled'' interferometers
with spectral
resolution of -200dBc/Hz at 1kHz Fourier frequency. This has been
lately
superseded by an order of magnitude with a waveguide
interferometer due to
its higher power recycling factor.
A number of opto-electronic measurement systems were developed to
characterize the fidelity of frequency transfer from the optical
to the
microwave domain. This included a new type of a phase detector
capable of
measuring phase fluctuations of the weak microwave signals
extracted from
the demodulated femtosecond light pulses with almost thermal
noise limited
precision. The experiments which followed showed that microwave
signals of
exceptional spectral purity could be generated from the frequency
stabilized
lasers
*Australian Research Council
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2010.MAR.T4.1