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A High-Extinction-Ratio Resonator for Suppressing Polarization Noise in Hollow-Core Photonic-Crystal Fiber Optic Gyro

  • Harbin Institute of Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Polarization-induced noise remains a primary source of bias drift, fundamentally limiting the performance of hollow-core photonic-crystal fiber optic gyroscopes (HC-RFOGs). To overcome this limitation, we propose and demonstrate a novel resonator design with an intrinsically high polarization extinction ratio (PER). The resonator’s core innovation is a four-port coupler architecture that strategically integrates a pair of polarization beam splitters (PBSs) with conventional beam splitters (BSs). This configuration functions as a high-fidelity polarization filter, suppressing undesired polarization states for both clockwise and counter-clockwise propagating light within the hollow-core fiber loop. Our theoretical model predicts that the effective in-resonator PER can exceed 48 dB, which is sufficient to mitigate polarization-related errors for tactical-grade applications. Experimental validation of a prototype HC-RFOG incorporating this resonator yields a bias instability of 1.34°/h and an angle random walk (ARW) of (Formula presented.) (with a 200 s averaging time). These results confirm that engineering a high-polarization-extinction-ratio resonator (HPERR) is a potent and direct pathway to substantially reducing polarization noise and advancing the performance of HC-RFOGs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1126
JournalPhotonics
Volume12
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • fiber optical sensor
  • photonic-crystal fiber
  • resonator fiber optic gyroscope

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