Credit: ICRAR.
Credit: ICRAR.

Record-breaking laser link could help us test whether Einstein was right

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Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

Scientists from Western Australia have set a world record for the most stable transmission of a laser signal through the atmosphere. The team combined Aussie ‘phase stabilisation’ technology with advanced self-guiding optical terminals to 'effectively eliminate atmospheric turbulence,' an advance which could help test Einstein's theory of general relativity. 

Journal/conference: Nature Communications

Link to research (DOI): 10.1038/s41467-020-20591-5

Organisation/s: International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), The University of Western Australia, French National Centre for Space Studies, French metrology lab Systèmes de Référence Temps-Espace

Funder: N/A

Media release

From: International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR)

Scientists from the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) and The University of Western Australia (UWA) have set a world record for the most stable transmission of a laser signal through the atmosphere.

In a study published today in the journal Nature Communications, Australian researchers teamed up with researchers from the French National Centre for Space Studies (CNES) and the French metrology lab Systèmes de Référence Temps-Espace (SYRTE) at Paris Observatory.

The team set the world record for the most stable laser transmission by combining the Aussies’ ‘phase stabilisation’ technology with advanced self-guiding optical terminals.

Together, these technologies allowed laser signals to be sent from one point to another without interference from the atmosphere.

Lead author Benjamin Dix-Matthews, a PhD student at ICRAR and UWA, said the technique effectively eliminates atmospheric turbulence.

“We can correct for atmospheric turbulence in 3D, that is, left-right, up-down and, critically, along the line of flight,” he said.

“It’s as if the moving atmosphere has been removed and doesn’t exist.

“It allows us to send highly-stable laser signals through the atmosphere while retaining the quality of the original signal.”

The result is the world’s most precise method for comparing the flow of time between two separate locations using a laser system transmitted through the atmosphere.

ICRAR-UWA senior researcher Dr Sascha Schediwy said the research has exciting applications.

“If you have one of these optical terminals on the ground and another on a satellite in space, then you can start to explore fundamental physics,” he said.

“Everything from testing Einstein’s theory of general relativity more precisely than ever before, to discovering if fundamental physical constants change over time.”

The technology’s precise measurements also have practical uses in earth science and geophysics.

“For instance, this technology could improve satellite-based studies of how the water table changes over time, or to look for ore deposits underground,” Dr Schediwy said.

There are further potential benefits for optical communications, an emerging field that uses light to carry information.

Optical communications can securely transmit data between satellites and Earth with much higher data rates than current radio communications.

“Our technology could help us increase the data rate from satellites to ground by orders of magnitude,” Dr Schediwy said.

“The next generation of big data-gathering satellites would be able to get critical information to the ground faster.”

The phase stabilisation technology behind the record-breaking link was originally developed to synchronise incoming signals for the Square Kilometre Array telescope.

The multi-billion-dollar telescope is set to be built in Western Australia and South Africa from 2021.

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Multimedia:

  • Project Team
    Project Team

    Members of the project team standing in front of a telescope dome located at the CNES campus in Toulouse, containing one of the self-guiding optical terminals.

    File size: 1.8 MB

    Attribution: Credit: ICRAR/UWA.

    Permission category: © - Only use with this story

    Last modified: 22 Jan 2021 9:10pm

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  • Optical Terminal
    Optical Terminal

    One of the self-guiding optical terminals on its telescope mount on the roof of a building at the CNES campus in Toulouse.

    File size: 3.9 MB

    Attribution: Credit: ICRAR/UWA

    Permission category: © - Only use with this story

    Last modified: 22 Jan 2021 9:10pm

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

  • Self-guiding optical terminal close up
    Self-guiding optical terminal close up

    A close-up of one of a self-guiding optical terminal showing the fibre-to-free-space telescope, active optics tip-tilt mirror, and feedback electronics.

    File size: 2.4 MB

    Attribution: Credit: ICRAR/UWA.

    Permission category: © - Only use with this story

    Last modified: 22 Jan 2021 9:10pm

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

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