摘要 |
<p>A monomode "hi-bi" optical fibre possesses two polarisation eigenmodes whose relative velocity depends on an external field. The magnitude of the external field (measurand) is determined by measuring the change in relative velocity either as an average over the length of the fibre or distributively, the latter allowing the distribution of the measurand to be determined as a continuous function of position along the length of the fibre. The velocity change is measured by causing the two eigenmodes (after polarisation control) to interfere optically on the surface of a "square-law" photodetector. This interference yields a difference frequency which may be either averaged over the fibre propagation time to give a "point" measurement, or time resolved to give a measurement spatially distributed along the length of the fibre</p> |