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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A material detector comprising:
means for producing a first coherent optical beam at a first frequency,
linearly polarized at a first angle,
means for producing a second, circularly polarized, coherent optical beam
at a second frequency,
a test cell for holding a sample to be tested for the presence of said
material,
means for transmitting collinearly said first and second beams through said
test cell, whereby said first beam becomes elliptically polarized, having
major and minor axes, when a quantity of said material is present in said
test cell and the sum of said first and second frequencies is
substantially equal to the frequency associated with a two-photon
resonance of said material,
a major axis rotation cell containing a medium,
means for extracting said first beam from said test cell and for
transmitting said first beam through said major axis rotation cell,
whereby said major axis is rotated to a second angle by the interaction of
said first beam with said medium, and
a polarization filter having an axis, intercepting said first beam after it
has passed through said major axis rotation cell, which axis is oriented
substantially at a right angle to said first angle, whereby said first
beam is transmitted by said polarization filter only when said material is
present in said test cell.
2. A material detector according to claim 1 in which said second frequency
is tunable.
3. A material detector according to claim 2 in which said medium is an
alkali metal vapor.
4. A material detector according to claim 3 in which said medium is sodium
vapor.
5. An apparatus for measuring elliptical polarization of a beam of optical
radiation comprising:
a major axis rotation cell containing a medium having a strong
single-photon resonance,
means for transmitting a beam of elliptically polarized optical radiation
of a predetermined frequency close to the frequency associated with said
single-photon resonance into said major axis rotation cell,
a polarization filter having an axis, which axis is rotatable about the
direction of transmission of said optical beam, and
means for extracting said optical beam from said major axis rotation cell
and for directing said optical beam into said filter whereby a portion of
said optical beam is transmitted by said filter, which portion varies as
said axis is rotated about said direction of transmission.
6. An apparatus for measuring elliptical polarization according to claim 5
in which said medium is an alkali metal vapor.
7. An apparatus for measuring elliptical polarization according to claim 6,
in which said medium is sodium vapor. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Previous work with lasers in the field of material detection has been in
the nature of tuning the laser beam across a single photon resonance of
the material being detected and measuring the amount of power absorbed or
scattered from the incident beam. This technique is rather insensitive and
is subject to background, since other materials may also remove power from
the beam.
The previous method of detection of elliptical polarization has merely been
to rotate a polarization filter and measure the power transmitted as a
function of angle. Since no polarization filter is perfect, there is a
finite amount of power transmitted by a filter at a right angle to the
plane of polarization of a linear beam and even a perfectly polarized
linear beam will appear to be slightly elliptically polarized. This method
also lacks sensitivity.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a device for measuring the degree of elliptical
polarization of a coherent beam of optical radiation. It makes use of a
self-induced ellipse rotation effect that takes place when the frequency
of the elliptically polarized beam is close to the frequency of a strong
single photon resonance of a medium.
In an application as a pollution detector, elliptical polarization is
induced in a linearly polarized beam by passing the linearly polarized
beam to be tested in coincidence with a circularly polarized beam through
a sample of a gaseous medium. When the frequencies of the two beams add
(or subtract) to a value close to the frequency associated with a
two-photon (or Raman) resonance of the pollutant that is to be measured,
the two beams interact in such a way that the initially linearly polarized
beam becomes slightly elliptically polarized, the degree of ellipticity
being dependent on the concentration of the material in question. The
major axis of the elliptically polarized beam so produced is then rotated
by the ellipse rotation effect described above by coupling the beam
through a cell having a medium with an appropriate single photon
resonance. The rotated elliptically polarized beam passes through a
polarization filter oriented at right angles to the initial direction of
linear polarization. The amount of radiation transmitted by the filter
depends on the amount of ellipticity, and thus on the concentration of the
pollutant that it is desired to measure.
The rotation effect serves to increase the sensitivity of the material
detector. A small portion of the elliptically polarized beam (depending on
the magnitude of the minor axis of the ellipse) would be transmitted by
the filter even in the absence of the ellipse rotation. The rotation of
the axis of the ellipse increases the amount of radiation transmitted and
thus increases the sensitivity of the device by producing a greater amount
of transmitted power for a given concentration of pollutant.
The device is also applicable, of course, for the measurement of the
concentration of desired materials as well as of pollutants.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 shows in partially schematic, partially pictorial form a material
detector according to the invention.
FIG. 2 shows in partially schematic, partially pictorial form an
ellipsometer according to the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
In FIG. 1, laser 1 generates a beam at a frequency that is close to the
frequency of a single-photon resonance of the material in major axis
rotator 8, illustratively the sodium vapor. The beam is polarized along a
predetermined direction by linear polarizer 3, passes through beamsplitter
5 and enters test cell 7 simultaneously with the beam from laser 2.
Laser 2 generates a beam at a frequency such that the sum (or difference)
of frequencies of the beams of lasers 1 and 2 is close to the frequency
associated with a selected two-photon (or Raman) resonance of the material
being tested. The beam from laser 2 is circularly polarized by polarizer 4
and is reflected by mirror 6 and beamsplitter 5 so that it enters test
cell 7 collinearly and simultaneously with the linear beam from laser 1.
Test cell 7 contains the material to be tested, illustratively a sample of
a gaseous mixture such as air. The sum (or difference) of the frequencies
of the two laser beams is set to a value close to the value associated
with a selected two-photon (or Raman) resonance of some pollutant, such as
carbon monoxide. If no carbon monoxide is present in the sample being
tested, the linearly polarized beam is unaffected as it passes through
test cell 7. In that case, the linearly polarized beam is not affected by
major axis . rotation cell 8, which acts only on elliptically polarized
beams, and passes through cell 8 to polarization filter 9, the axis of
which is set at a right angle to the direction of polarization of the
beam. Since the respective axes of polarization of beam and filter are at
right angles, the beam is blocked by the filter.
If some carbon monoxide is present in test cell 7, then the circularly
polarized beam from laser 2 interacts with that component of the linearly
polarized beam that satisfies the relevant angular momentum quantum
mechanical selection rule. With the quantum mechanical selection rule
satisifed, some fraction of that component of the linear beam will be
absorbed, the amount absorbed being dependent on the density of carbon
monoxide present in test cell 7. As the formerly linearly polarized beam
leaves test cell 7, the two circularly polarized components of that beam
will no longer be equal in amplitude, since one has been partially
absorbed, and the beam will no longer be linearly polarized but will be
elliptically polarized.
In major axis rotation cell 8, the two components of the elliptically
polarized beam interact with the sodium vapor unequally, the precise
strength of the interaction being dependent on how close the frequency of
the beam is to the frequency associated with the resonance mentioned above
(the well-known sodium-D line), the effect of this unequal interaction
being to rotate the major axis of the elliptically polarized beam. The
effect of this rotation on the amount of radiation passing through
polarizing filter 9 is to increase it by a large amount. If major axis
rotation cell 8 were not present, a small amount of light would pass
through filter 9, and be detected in detector 10 the amount of light being
dependent on the magnitude of the minor axis of the ellipse. When the
major axis is rotated, the amount of light transmitted will be much larger
than in the unrotated case, and detector 10 (having a particular
sensitivity) will be able to detect far smaller quantities of carbon
monoxide.
The increase of sensitivity of a detector constructed according to this
invention over the sensitivity of a prior art detector may be illustrated
by a numerical example, using sodium as the medium in the major axis
rotation cell (at a density of 10.sup.14 /cm.sup.3) and a detuning of 1
GHz of the frequency of laser 1 from the sodium-D line.
The major axis will be rotated by an angle
##EQU1##
where l is the length of the major axis rotation cell, .mu. is the sodium
vapor density, .nu. is the frequency of laser 1, .DELTA..nu. is the
detuning of laser 1 from the D resonance, .mu..sub.12 is the dipole moment
of the resonance, h is Planck's constant, c is the speed of light, and
I.sub.R is the extra intensity of the stronger circularly polarized
component of the elliptically polarized beam. If we assume confocal
focusing,
##EQU2##
where P.sub.R is the extra power in watts. Substituting in Equation (1),
we have:
.PHI.(radians) = 1.2 .times. 10.sup.4 P.sub.R (watts). (3)
The maximum P.sub.R may be expressed as:
##EQU3##
where T is the lifetime of the level involved in the two-photon transition
(10.sup.-8 sec.), n is the number of molecules of pollutant per cubic
centimeter, and the other symbols have been defined.
Substituting for .PHI. and squaring, we have
.PHI..sup.2 = 16 .times. 10.sup.-14 n.sup.2. (5)
The limit of detection of .PHI. is .PHI..sup.2 = 10.sup.-7 (see
"Doppler-Free Laser Polarization Spectroscopy", by C. Wieman and T. W.
Hansch in Physical Review Letters, 36, 1170 (1976)), so the minimum amount
of pollutant that may be detected is n = 8 .times. 10.sup.2 molecules. In
a cell 10 centimeters long with confocal focusing, this corresponds to a
density of approximately 3 .times. 10.sup.5 molecules/cm.sup.3.
Since air has a density of approximately 3 = 10.sup.19 molecules/cm.sup.3,
contaminants present in the ratio of one part in 10.sup.14 may be
detected. The best measurement with absorption techniques that has come to
our attention had a sensitivity of 10.sup.10 molecules/cm.sup.3
("Measurement of Sodium-Vapor-Density at Very Low Pressures by an Optical
Method", by N. Ioli et al., Journal of the Optical Society of America, 61,
1251, (1971)). Accordingly, the present invention provides a factor of
30,000 increase in sensitivity.
This same amplification process of major axis rotation cell 8 can be used
to measure the ellipticity of a beam produced by any other means, such as
a pattern of birefringence induced by stress in an optical element and
cell 8 can be used in connection with polarization filter 9 to measure
ellipticity in the apparatus shown in FIG. 2. Source 20 produces a beam of
radiation, the ellipticity of which is to be measured. The beam passes
through major axis rotator 8 and polarization filter 9, as before,
continuing on to detector 10. If source 20 is tunable, the frequency of
the beam is tuned off resonance so the beam passes through cell 8
unaffected and filter 9 is rotated to measure the major and minor axes of
the ellipse by observation of the signal in detector 10. Filter 9 is set
along the minor axis (i.e., at a right angle to the major axis) and the
frequency is tuned through the resonance. The signal in detector 10 is
then a measure of the degree of rotation of the major axis and thus a
measure of the ellipticity.
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Description  |
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