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INTERFEROMETRY

Have you ever done one of those spot-the-difference newspaper puzzles where you have to find the missing details using two very similar cartoons? The quick way to solve them is to cut out the two images, place one on top of the other, and shine a light through the paper. It might sound like cheating but it's actually science: you're using the light pattern from one image to show up differences in the other. Scientists use a very similar process called interferometry to measure small things with incredibly high accuracy by comparing light or radio beams. Let's take a closer look at how it works!

Photo: A laser interferometer. The laser beam is split into two parts. One part travels straight to a detector while the other undergoes a change of some sort. By comparing the two beams again at the end, you can measure the extent of the change very precisely.

How do interferometers work?


An interferometer is a really precise scientific instrument designed to measure things with extraordinary accuracy. The basic idea of interferometry involves taking a beam of light (or another type of electromagnetic radiation) and splitting it into two equal halves using what's called a beam-splitter (also called a half-transparent mirror or half-mirror). This is simply a piece of glass whose surface is very thinly coated with silver. If you shine light at it, half the light passes straight through and half of it reflects backso the beam-splitter is like a cross between an ordinary piece of glass and a mirror. One of the beams (known as the reference beam) shines onto a mirror and from there to a screen or camera. The other beam shines at or through something you want to measure, onto a second mirror, back through the beam splitter, and onto the same screen or camera. This second beam travels an extra distance (or in some other slightly different way) to the first beam, so it gets slightly out of step (out of phase). When the two light beams meet up at the screen or camera, they overlap and interfere, and the phase difference between them creates a pattern of light and dark areas (in other words, a set of interference fringes). The light areas are places where the two beams have added together (constructively) and become brighter; the dark areas are places where the beams have subtracted from one another (destructively). The exact pattern of interference depends on the different way or the extra distance that one of the beams has traveled. By inspecting and measuring the fringes, you can calculate this with great accuracyand that gives you an exact measurement of whatever it is you're trying to find.

Artwork: How a basic (Michelson) interferometer works. If we take the green beam to be the reference beam, we'd subject the blue beam to some sort of change we wanted to measure. The interferometer combines the two beams and the interference fringes that appear on the screen are a visual representation of the difference between them.

What are the different types of interferometers?


Interferometers became popular toward the end of the 19th century and there are several different kinds, each based roughly on the principle we've outlined above and named for the scientist who perfected it. Three common types are the Michelson, Fabry-Perot, and Fizeau interferometers:

The Michelson interferometer (named for Albert Michelson, 18531931) is probably best known for the part it played in the famous Michelson-Morley experiment in 1881. That was when Michelson and his colleague Edward Morley (18381923) disproved the existence of a mysterious invisible fluid called "the ether" that physicists had believed filled empty space. The Michelson-Morley experiment was an important stepping-stone toward Albert Einstein's theory of relativity. The Fabry-Perot interferometer (invented in 1897 by Charles Fabry, 18671945, and Alfred Perot, 18631925), also known as an etalon, evolved from the Michelson interferometer. It makes clearer and sharper fringes that are easier to see and measure. The Fizeau interferometer (named for French physicist Hippolyte Fizeau, 18191896) is another variation and is generally easier to use than a Fabry-Perot. It's widely used for making optical and engineering measurements.

Photo: Albert Einstein solved the "failed" Michelson-Morley interferometer experiment with his theory of relativity.

Most modern interferometers use laser light because it's more regular and precise than ordinary light and produces coherent beams (in which all the light waves travel in phase). The pioneers of

interferometry didn't have access to lasers (which weren't developed until the mid-20th century) so they had to use beams of light passed through slits and lenses instead.

How accurate are interferometers?


A state-of-the-art interferometer can measure distances to within 1 nanometer, but like any other kind of measurement, it's subject to errors. The biggest source of error is likely to come from changes in the wavelength of the laser light, which depends on the refractive index of the material through which it's traveling. The temperature, pressure, humidity, and concentration of different gases in the air all change its refractive index, altering the wavelength of the laser light passing through it and potentially introducing measurement errors. Fortunately, good interferometers can compensate for this. Some have separate lasers that measure the air's refractive index, while others measure air temperature, pressure, and humidity and calculate the effect on the refractive index indirectly; either way, measurements can be corrected and the overall error is reduced to perhaps one or two parts per million.

Photo: Interferometry in action: These 3D topographical maps of Long Valley, California were made from the Space Shuttle using a technique called radar interferometry, in which beams of microwaves are reflected off Earth's contours and then recombined.

What are interferometers used for?


Interferometers are widely used in all kinds of scientific and engineering applications for making accurate measurements. By scanning interferometers over objects, you can also make very precise maps of surfaces. By "accurate" and "precise", I really do mean accurate and precise! The interference fringes that an optical (light-based) interferometer produces are made by light waves traveling fractionally out of step. Since the wavelength of visible light is in the hundreds of nanometers, interferometers can theoretically measure lengths a couple of hundred times smaller than a human hair! In practice, everyday laboratory constraints sometimes make that kind of accuracy hard to achieve. Albert Michelson, for example, found his ether-detecting apparatus was affected by traffic movements about a third of a kilometer away! Astronomers also use interferometers to combine signals from telescopes so they work in the same way as larger and much more powerful instruments that can penetrate deeper into space. Some of these interferometers work with light waves; others use radio waves (similar to light waves but with much longer wavelengths and lower frequencies).

Photo: The Keck interferometer. Astronomers have linked the two 10-m (33-ft) optical telescopes in these domes on Mauna Kea, Hawaii to make what is effectively a single, much more powerful telescope.

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