research papers
Operation model of a skew-symmetric split-crystal neutron interferometer
aINRIM – Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica, Strada delle cacce 91, 10135 Torino, Italy, and bDipartimento di Fisica, UNITO – Università di Torino, via Pietro Giuria 1, 10125 Torino, Italy
*Correspondence e-mail: c.sasso@inrim.it
The observation of neutron interference using a triple Laue interferometer formed by two separate crystals opens the way to the construction and operation of skew-symmetric interferometers with extended arm separation and length. The specifications necessary for their successful operation are investigated here: most importantly, how the manufacturing tolerance and crystal alignments impact the interference visibility. In contrast with previous studies, both incoherent sources and the three-dimensional operation of the interferometer are considered. It is found that, with a Gaussian Schell model of an incoherent source, the integrated density of the particles leaving the interferometer is the same as that yielded by a coherent Gaussian source having a radius equal to the coherence length.
Keywords: split-crystal interferometry; neutron interferometry; X-ray interferometry; dynamical theory of X-ray diffraction; X-ray and neutron coherence.
1. Introduction
Since its first demonstrations by Bonse and Hart in 1965 (Bonse & Hart, 1965) and Rauch and collaborators in 1974 (Rauch et al., 1974), perfect-crystal interferometry has been a powerful tool to perform phase-contrast imaging and metrology with X-rays and neutrons (Rauch & Werner, 2000; Tamasaku et al., 2002; Momose, 2003; Klein, 2009; Pignol et al., 2015; Massa et al., 2020; Sponar et al., 2021; Heacock et al., 2021).
A proof-of-principle demonstration has shown that the alignment and operation of a split-crystal interferometer with the accuracy required for neutron interference are possible (Lemmel et al., 2022). This prompts the design and operation of skew-symmetric interferometers operating with both X-rays and neutrons and having the potential of crystal separations up to the metre scale.
This work aims to understand the machining and alignment specifications necessary for the successful design, manufacture and operation of such a skew-symmetric split-crystal interferometer. Becker & Bonse (1974) observed unexpected and unexplained interference fringes associated with the relative tilt of split crystals having a period of 0.3 µrad, which might complicate the instrument's operation. Windisch & Becker (1992) proposed a mirror crystal with twice the thickness of the splitter and the analyser to achieve fringe contrast also far from the perfect Bragg alignment of the split crystals.
On the basis of the formalism developed by Sasso et al. (2022), we here quantify the effects of the design parameters, machining tolerances and misalignments on the interferometer operation. In contrast to previous studies (Becker & Bonse, 1974; Bauspiess et al., 1976; Bonse & Graeff, 1977; Bonse, 1988; Windisch & Becker, 1992; Mana & Vittone, 1997; Authier, 2001; Mana & Montanari, 2004), we consider the propagation, in three dimensions, of partially coherent X-rays and neutrons.
The paper is organized as follows. The . Section 3 gives the mathematical tools to propagate X-rays and neutrons through a split-crystal skew-symmetric interferometer by taking all the relevant into account. A partially coherent source is modeled in Section 4. Sections 5 and 6 examine the interference of the waves leaving the interferometer, first assuming coherent illumination and then incoherent. The results of numerical and Monte Carlo simulations investigating the interferometer's sensitivity to crystal thicknesses and misalignments and the manufacturing tolerances are given in Sections 7 and 8.
of X-ray and neutron propagation in perfect crystals is recalled in Section 2We have omitted the effects of gravity, the Coriolis force and interferometer accelerations (Bonse & Wroblewski, 1983, 1984). Taking them into account requires the quantum propagators of neutrons subjected to the gravitational and Coriolis forces in free space, and perfect crystals and crystal interferometers; these will be the subject of a forthcoming paper.
We carried out all the computations with the aid of Mathematica (Wolfram Research, 2021a); the relevant notebook and a PDF rendering of the script are given as supporting information. To view and interact with the notebook, the reader may download the Wolfram Player free of charge (Wolfram Research, 2021b).
2. of diffraction
2.1. Crystal fields
As Fig. 1 shows, we assume symmetrically cut and plane-parallel crystals. The normal to the surfaces and the reciprocal vector , where d is the spacing of the diffracting planes, define a reference frame. The origin is on the crystal surface and the y axis points up. The position vector r = is split into the = (x, y) component (on the crystal surface) and the z component which determines the optical axis and plays the role of fictitious time.
Let us introduce the single-particle state,
which belongs to the tensor product of the space of the square-integrable two-variable functions and the two-dimensional V2. We use the 2 × 1 matrix representation of V2,
In (1a), γ = , where ΘB is the and
are the kinematic wavevectors satisfying the Bragg conditions Kh = Ko + h and |Ko| = |Kh| = K = 2π/λ, where λ is the wavelength of the incident radiation. We also consider a coplanar geometry, that is, Ko, Kh, h and are in the same (horizontal) reflection plane.
To discuss X-ray and neutron interferometry together, the coefficients υh of the Fourier expansion of the periodic Fermi pseudo-potential (Rauch & Werner, 2000) are linked to the coefficients χh of the Fourier expansion of the crystal dielectric susceptibility (Stepanov, 2004) by setting χh = −υh/K2. Also, in the X-ray case, we consider only a polarization state that is parallel or orthogonal to the reflection plane.
We kept the effects of absorption, μ = Im(χ0)K, and n0 − 1 = Re(χ0)/2, apart in the factor, where χ0 = 0 in a vacuum. In our analysis, this factor is irrelevant and will be omitted.
The χ±h phases depend on the origin of the coordinate system in the a translation u changes χ±h according to . We assume that χ(−x; z) = χ(x; z), so that χh = χ−h. Furthermore, since , the sign of χ±h can be either positive or negative.
2.2. Free-space propagation
Neglecting gravity and the Coriolis force, free-space propagation is given by
is the reciprocal-space representation of |ψ(z)〉, the resonance error is the variable conjugate of ,
is the transfer matrix and is the Ko,h component along the z axis.
2.3. Crystal diffraction
Still neglecting gravity and the Coriolis force, Laue diffraction in a symmetrically cut crystal is given by
where, assuming that x = 0 is a symmetry plane of the crystal, the transfer matrix is
The reflection and transmission coefficients are
Here, ζ = πz/Λe is the dimensionless propagation distance, is the dimensionless resonance error, Λe = 2πγ/(K|χh|) is the pendellösung length and ν = χh/|χh| is the χh phasor. If the symmetry plane of the crystal is x = s, then substitutes for . A list of the main symbols used is given in Appendix E.
3. Interferometer operation
To increase the separation and length of the arms, a skew-symmetric interferometer is necessary (Kuetgens & Becker, 1998; Yoneyama et al., 1999). It consists of two independent crystals that we denote I and II, each of which has two diffracting slabs protruding from the same base. In this configuration, the displacement of one crystal against the other does not affect the interference. They can be positioned far apart and the interferometer can be operated by tuning two angles, the mutual yaw and pitch angles of the split crystals.
Since the two crystals might be oriented and displaced differently (Figs. 2, 3 and 4), the representations of the neutron state and transfer matrix – equations (4a) and (1a), respectively – cannot be simultaneously used for both because the crystals' kinematic vectors defined in (2) are different.
To express the single-particle state leaving crystal I on the basis of the kinematic wavevectors relevant to crystal II, we observe that the position vector rI (as seen by crystal I and relative to the interferometer focus, which is the point in the reflection plane where the split particles are recombined) is seen from crystal II as
where
The yaw θ, pitch ρ and roll ψ angles are the rotation angles about the y, z and x axes, respectively. We introduced the displacement s along the x axis because it shifts the reference-frame origin versus the diffracting planes and it is not ab initio evident that it is irrelevant. In contrast, the y (vertical) and z (axial) translations are irrelevant and have been omitted.
From the viewpoint of crystal I, crystal II first rotates about the focal axis (see Figs. 2 and 4),
and then translates by . From the vantage point of crystal I, crystal II counter-rotates and counter-translates.
The problem to be solved is constructing the unitary operator that implements the reference-frame transformation in the space. Mutatis mutandis, it is the same problem as constructing an operator that allows propagation of a polarized photon through a birefringent crystal whose transfer matrix is given in the basis of the crystal's eigenvectors, while the photon polarization state is given in a different basis.
The values of the single-particle wavefunction will remain unchanged despite the change in the reference frame. If it is the function φI(rI) of the coordinate rI in the crystal I frame, it will be the function φII(rII) = φI(rI) of the coordinate rII = MrI of the same point in the crystal II frame. Therefore, the relevant transformation of the crystal I (quantum) state |φI(z)〉 into the crystal II one, , can be obtained by explicit construction as done by Sasso et al. (2022), but now extended to a non-null roll angle. The result is (see Section 3 in the supporting information)
where
and (p′, q′) and (p, q) are the variables conjugate to (xI, yI) and (xII − s, yII), respectively. Since we assumed zII = zI, we approximated the transformation by rotating the crystal II diffracting planes, not the crystal itself.
The Dirac-delta arguments p + ρq − θKz and q ± hρ/2 + ψKz encode the changes of the -mode propagation direction seen by crystal II. The ±θz phase terms encode the displacement of crystal II along the x axis due to the yaw angle θ. The phase factor , which is common to the o and h states, corresponds to geometric optics. It encodes that the incoming rays seen by crystal II are translated by . This phase factor is essential to account for the difference between the free-space propagations from mirrors 1 and 2 to the analyser. The first is carried out in the crystal I reference frame, the second in the crystal II one.
Eventually, the propagation through the interferometer is given by
where, by concatenating the crystal and free-space transfer matrices and taking the (possible) misalignment of the split crystals into account,
X1 and X2 propagate the initial |φin〉 state along the first and second arms of the interferometer, respectively, Pn projects into the |n〉 state, and the meaning of the geometric quantities is shown in Figs. 2, 3 and 4.
Since the reciprocal-space representation of Xi is not diagonal, the propagation of requires an integration. Hence,
where is a 2 × 2 matrix and i = 1, 2 labels the interferometer arm. Here and in the following, we omit to indicate the source and detector z coordinates, which are implied in the in and out subscripts.
To achieve the maximum visibility of the interference fringes, the interferometer geometry must be free of aberration, that is, θ = ρ = ψ = 0 rad, tS = tA, tM1 = tM2, zA1 = zM2 and zA2 = zM2, and consequently the defocus Δz = (zA1 − zM1) − (zM2 − zA2) is null.
4. Input wave: partially coherent source
To take the partial coherence of the source into account, we describe each incoming particle as in the probabilistic superposition of the (separable) single-particle Gaussian wave packets (Appendix B),
or, by using the reciprocal-space representation,
where is the origin, l0 is the radius and is the propagation angle to the Ko wavevector.
Here, , α0 and are uncorrelated normal variables having zero mean. Without loss of generality, we made the x0 mean and reference-frame origins coincide and, for the sake of simplicity, assumed circular profiles for both the single-particle states and their superposition.
After averaging over these single-particle states (see Section 4 in the supporting information), we obtain a Gaussian Schell model of the source (Schell, 1967; Mandel & Wolf, 1995; Wolf, 2007). The relevant 2 × 2 position-space representation of the density matrix is
where
ℓ0 ≃ l0/(1 + l0σ0) measures the coherence length, σ0 is the standard deviation of the distribution, w0 ≫ ℓ0 is the 1/e2 source radius and
By using the 2 × 2 reciprocal-space representation, we have
where, provided ,
Propagation of the density matrix is given by = , where the dagger indicates the conjugate transpose (Appendix B). The diagonal elements and are the particle densities of the n = o, h states in the chosen basis.
The density matrix associated with a completely incoherent superposition is diagonal with identical elements. That associated with a coherent (Gaussian) single-particle state |φin〉 having radius w0 corresponds to (9b), where and, consequently, the term proportional to is omitted (see Section 4 in the supporting information). The reciprocal-space representation (9c) is accordingly recalculated as
5. Exit waves: coherent source
When making explicit the components of (7a), (7b) and (7c) to calculate the |φout〉 components, the resulting algebra is quite abstruse so the reader is referred to Section 5 in the supporting information. Here, therefore, we start by considering the simplest case of a coherent initial state. If the initial single-particle state is , by application of (7a)–(7c), the final state, after travelling through the interferometer, is
where zD is the detector distance from the source and (see Section 5 in the supporting information)
These equations concatenate the relevant reflection and transmission coefficients of the splitter, mirrors and analyser. The θKz − ρq offset of the arguments and hsθ phase originate from the transformation of the second-crystal chain of transfer matrices to take the misalignment of the split crystals into account. Free-space propagations are responsible for the exponential factor of (10), which encodes diffraction, and the pΔx − qΔy phase.
We omitted the second-order terms.
is the vertical offset between the interfering rays leaving the source collinearly or that at the source between those interfering collinearly (Fig. 3),
is the vertical component of the angle of reflection of the particle bouncing off the crystal II diffracting planes (Fig. 3), and
is the mutual displacement (along the x axis) between the analyser and mirror 2 when crystal II rotates by an angle θ. The horizontal offset of the interfering plane waves (Fig. 2),
is null when the defocus
[where zF1 = zM2 + (tM2 − tM1)/2 and zF2 = zM1 + (tM1 − tM2)/2 (Fig. 2) are the focal plane distances from the mirrors] is zero.
Free-space propagation separates the o and h states leaving the interferometer into two spatially localized states, and , whose i = 1, 2 components interfere. Therefore, in equations (11a)–(11d), we omitted non-essential phase terms shared by the i = 1, 2 waves and associated the phase difference between the interfering waves with .
If the detector counts the total particles per time unit, the observed signals are
where, using the Parseval theorem to carry out the integrations in
the mean count rate, interference, visibility and phase are given, respectively, byThe phase hsθ in (11b) and (11d) is the foundation of angle measurements by crystal X-ray interferometry (Windisch & Becker, 1992; Kuetgens & Becker, 1998). A rotation by an angle θ between the split crystals changes the interference phase by hsθ = h(zA2 + tM2/2)θ. As a result, it yields travelling fringes, the period of which depends on the crystal separation zA2 + tM2/2. By noting that h = , this phase can be rewritten as
where zOPD = zA2 + tM2, = , Kz = , Kx = and ΔOPD is the length difference of the interferometer arms (Fig. 4).
Therefore, two equivalent descriptions of the angular sensitivity of the interferometer are possible. Firstly, from the viewpoint of the incoming particles, mirror 2 moves by relative to the analyser but the arm lengths are unchanged. Secondly, from the standpoint of crystal II, the source and crystal I are displaced rigidly and the arm lengths change.
As in the symmetric counterpart, a defocused skew-symmetric interferometer moves the interfering waves apart horizontally by = and this shift is encoded – via the `time-shifting' property of the Fourier transform – by the phase difference pΔx in (11b) and (11d).
Differently from what happens with its symmetric counterpart and as shown in Fig. 4, the pitch misalignment of the split crystals does not misalign the interfering waves but moves them apart vertically by Δy, and this shift is encoded by the phase difference qΔy in (11b) and (11d). This raises questions about the effect of source coherence that are answered in the next section.
The interferometer is insensitive to the displacements and roll rotations of the two blocks. In fact, the s and ψ disappear from equations (11a)–(11d). Also, by neglecting gravity and the Coriolis force, it is insensitive to displacements along the z axis. In fact, a constant added to zM2 and zA1 does not change the defocus, which is the only quantity in equations (11a)–(11d) that depends on the z coordinate. These insensitivities make the skew-symmetric geometry the best choice to obtain long and variable interferometer arms.
Last, but not least, equations (11a)–(11d) do not evidence fast differential phase variations in the interfering beams associated with the ρ angle between the split crystals, as reported by Becker & Bonse (1974).
6. Exit waves: partially coherent source
The propagation of the particles emitted by a partially coherent source through the interferometer – a linear system described by the transfer matrix X – differs from (7a) only because the 2 × 2 density matrix takes the place of the single-particle wavefunction |φin〉 as the propagated quantity. Therefore (Feynman, 2018; Cohen-Tannoudji et al., 2019),
The position- and reciprocal-space densities of the particles leaving the interferometer in the n = o, h states,
and
are the diagonal elements of the representations = and = . The elements of these representations are linked by
The ij elements of the propagated density matrix are
where are the nn = oo, hh diagonal elements of the 2 × 2 matrix = . The operators Xi [equations (7a)–(7c)] concatenate the reflection and transmission coefficients of the splitter, mirrors and analyser and propagate the initial mixed state along the i = 1, 2 arms. The projector Po originates from = [equation (9c)]. More details of the derivation of (19) are given by Sasso et al. (2022). The results of integration (19) are given in Appendix C.
The integration of the n = o, h states. Hence, the equivalents of equations (15a)–(15e) are
gives the total counts of the particles leaving the interferometer in thewhere
and the expressions are given in Appendix C.
The matrix elements in equations (20a)–(20e) are the incoherent dual of in equations (15a)–(15e). More precisely, by disentangling its algebraic structure, we can see that (19) propagates every single-particle wave packet in the probabilistic superposition that describes the source, calculates every product , and averages them over the random origins, phase and propagation direction.
A noteworthy result [equations (34a)–(34h) in Appendix C] is that, assuming a Gaussian Schell model of the source, equations (20a)–(20e) differ from (15a)–(15e) only by a scale factor. Therefore, they describe the integrated interference observed when the source is Gaussian with a radius equal to the coherence length ℓ0. Also, the spherical wave approximation of the initial state (Authier, 2001) corresponds to ℓ0 = 0 and an incoherent source.
6.1. Moiré fringes
The pitch misalignment ρ shifts the interfering waves vertically by = . This offset stems from the qΔy phase of and [equations (11a)–(11d)] because of the `time-shifting' property of the Fourier transform. Owing to the curvature of the interfering wavefronts, it yields a pattern of horizontal fringes.
The a) encodes this pattern. To see this, let us consider the h state and the q factor of . By neglecting the qρ offset in the argument of the reflection and transmission coefficients, the p factor of is irrelevant. Hence, the terms of interest in (18b) [see also equations (33a)–(33i)] are
(18where ,
and zD is the detector distance from the source.
The result of the inverse Fourier transform (18c) is (see Section 6.1 in the supporting information)
where ℓD and wD are, respectively, the correlation length and beam size at the detector plane z = zD (Appendix B). Finally, the position-space density of the particles leaving the interferometer in the h state (18a) is
where
is the fringe period, 1/rD is the principal curvature of the at the detector plane [equation (32c) in Appendix B] and
is the interference visibility.
The fringe period Λρ is the same as that of the moiré pattern originating from the superposition of two (cylindrical) wavefronts having the same radius of curvature and propagating parallel at the ΘB angle to the z axis and at the Δy vertical distance.
Regarding the visibility Γ, the hyperbolic secant comes from the different amplitudes of the interfering beams at the vertical coordinate y [equations (23a) and (23b)]. It expresses the visibility of the fringes generated by a coherent source and corresponds to the ℓD → ∞ limit of (26). In this case, the visibility is a maximum (actually, one) when y = Δy/2, because the interfering beams have equal amplitude. It is also a maximum when wD → ∞, because in such a case the wavefront curvature is null. The exponential factor, where Δy = and ρ is the pitch angle between the split crystals, takes the partial coherence of the source into account.
To give a numerical example, with a divergent beam originating from a point source 2 m away from the detector, a 0.1 m mirror-to-analyser separation and (220) reflecting planes, the fringe period is Λρ = 3.8 mm µrad/ρ.
7. Results
The interferometer operation has been numerically simulated to study its sensitivity to geometric aberrations and to quantify the machining and alignment tolerances to attain a satisfactory functioning. The values of the parameters used in the simulations are given in Table 1. Owing to the significant X-ray absorption, the choice of 15.7Λe ≃ 0.619 mm for the crystal thickness follows the objective of combined X-ray and neutron interferometry.
|
7.1. Crystal thicknesses
If the interferometer geometry is ideal, that is, tS = tA, tM1 = tM2, Δz = 0 and θ = ρ = 0 rad, the visibility of the interference of the particles that leave the interferometer in the o state is one. Therefore, the thickness of the interferometer crystals can be optimized by maximizing the visibility of the interference of the particles that leave the interferometer in the h state. As anticipated in the Introduction, two cases are worth considering, (i) tM1 = tM2 = tS = tA and (ii) tM1 = tM2 = 2tS = 2tA (Bauspiess et al., 1976; Becker et al., 2001).
Fig. 5 shows the transmittances of the interferometer from the initial to the final, n = o, h, states. They are calculated as
where the d) and the correlation length ℓ0 is set to 10 nm.
is given by (9Due to the interferometer's limited angular acceptance, the transmittance depends on the angular width of the initial state. The larger the former, the smaller the latter. The oscillations, having periods of Λe and Λe/2, are what remains of the pendellösung fringes. They originate in the periodicity of the transmission and reflection coefficients (4b) and (4c) and are damped by the scattering of the initial p modes. It is worth noting that the crystal thickness is the dual of the laser in atom interferometry.
The visibility of the h-state fringes is given in Fig. 6. Pendellösung fringes are again visible, having periodicity Λe/2 [case (ii)] and Λe [case (i)]. Both the particle densities and visibility are maxima when tS = tA ≃ (m + 0.7)Λe, where m is an integer. This condition will be adopted from now on.
7.2. Rocking curves
The interferometer rocking curves are given by the total counts
of the particles leaving the interferometer in the n = o, h states and crossing the interferometer along the i = 1, 2 arms. Among them, the triple reflection rocking curve plays a significant role in the alignment of the split-crystals' yaw angles. This is shown in Fig. 7 where the pitch angle ρ between the split crystals is null.
The ρq offset of the arguments of the R(p + θKz − ρq; tA) and R(p + θKz − ρq; tM2) factors of [equation (34f)] shifts the exact Bragg alignment of the q mode from θ = 0 to θ = ρq/Kz. Therefore, if the mutual pitch angle of the split crystals is not null, the integration (28) of over q washes out the pendellösung fringes. In particular, it washes out the central peak of Fig. 7. This peak loss might be used to align the pitch angles of the split crystals.
Fig. 8 shows how the height of the θ = 0 peak depends on the mutual pitch angle ρ. The rocking curve generated by a Gaussian Schell model of the source is the same as that yielded by a fully coherent Gaussian source having a radius equal to the coherence length ℓ0 (see Appendix C). Therefore, the greater the coherence, the greater the collimation of the initial state and the greater the interferometer transmittance. For this reason, in Fig. 8, to show how the peak visibility depends on the source coherence, we normalized all maxima to the same (unit) value.
In the case of coherent plane-wave illumination (i.e. if Kℓ0 → ∞ and Kw0 → ∞), q = 0 and the rocking curves are insensitive to the pitch misalignment. As the source coherence decreases, the central peak of the triple-reflection rocking curve disappears. In fact, the smaller coherence length and collimation imply a greater spread of the q modes.
7.3. Fringe visibility
As shown in Fig. 9, the yaw misalignment causes a loss of interference visibility, which is due to the averaging of the pendellösung fringes implied by (20c). If zM1 = zM2 = 2zS = 2zA, the interference also preserves a significant contrast when θ ≠ 0. In fact, if Ξn is approximated by averaging the oscillating terms of and θ ≠ 0, the result is zero. However, if zM1 = zM2 = 2zS = 2zA, some of the arguments of the trigonometric functions that replace the products and powers of sines and cosines in [equations (34c), (4b) and (4c)] are null and thus the function value is independent of the misalignment. Consequently, in this case and only in this case, averaging the oscillating terms of does not nullify Ξn. The price to pay is the strictest alignment required to achieve the maximum visibility.
The sensitivity of the visibility to the yaw misalignment depends on the crystal thickness. Fig. 10 shows the full width at half-maximum of the θ = 0 peak for the interference of the particles that leave the interferometer in the o state. The thinner the crystals, the better.
The loss of visibility due to the pitch misalignment can be investigated by considering the q factor of [equations (34a)–(34h)] and neglecting the qρ offset in the argument of the reflection and transmission coefficients so that the p factor of is irrelevant. Also, for the sake of simplicity, we limit the analysis to the h state. By application of equations (20a)–(20d), we obtain (see Section 7.3 in the supporting information)
where is the vertical offset of the interfering rays.
With a skew-symmetric splitting of the crystals, the pitch misalignment is less critical than with the symmetric splitting used to demonstrate the feasibility of the interferometer alignment. In fact, unlike what happens when only the analyser is separated and the interfering beams are mutually tilted by the analyser's reflection, the loss of visibility depends only on the coherence length ℓ0. As examined in Appendix D and the supporting information, the rationale of the visibility being independent of the beam size and detector distance is the parallelism of the interfering beams.
If the illumination is coherent (i.e. if ) then equation (29), where w0 substitutes for ℓ0, holds. This is because equations (20a)–(20e) describe equivalently the operation of an interferometer illuminated by a fully coherent Gaussian beam having a source size equal to ℓ0. When both Kw0 and Kℓ0 tend to infinity, the illumination is a plane wave and the visibility is insensitive to the pitch misalignment. This is consistent with the insensitivity of a skew-symmetric interferometer to the mutual slide of the split crystals and the null curvature of the interfering wavefronts. A nomogram showing (29) as a function of the correlation length ℓ0 and pitch angle ρ is given in Fig. 11.
8. Monte Carlo simulation
We used Monte Carlo simulations to evaluate how manufacturing errors affect the visibility of the interference fringes and the uncertainty of the measurement of their phase.
8.1. Fringe visibility
To maximize the interferometer transmittivity and the visibility of the h-state interference, the thickness of the interferometer crystals was set to (i) tM1 = tM2 = tS = tA = 15.7Λe ≃ 0.619 mm and (ii) tM1 = tM2 = 2tS = 2tA = 2 × 15.7Λe ≃ 1.239 mm.
Although the splitter–analyser and mirror pairs should have the same thickness and a null defocus, the removal of surface damage after cutting causes geometric imperfections. To simulate them, the actual thicknesses were obtained by adding random errors sampled from a zero mean uniform distribution having [−u, u] support, u being the targeted manufacturing tolerance. In addition, a zero mean defocus Δz was sampled from the same uniform distribution. The crystals were assumed to be perfectly aligned and therefore the yaw and pitch angles were always set to zero. There were 10 000 simulation runs.
A visibility histogram when the manufacturing tolerance is u = 2 µm and the interferometer is perfectly aligned, that is, the crystals' mutual yaw and pitch angles are null, is shown in Fig. 12. The differences between cases (i) and (ii) are tiny but visible. On average, case (i), i.e. all the crystals having the same thickness, ensures a slightly greater visibility, mainly when the post-selected state is the h one.
8.2. Phase uncertainty
In the absence of extraneous noise, the utmost accuracy of the fringe-phase determination is set by the dual wave and particle nature of X-rays and neutrons, which produces a count noise. The et al., 1991)
of the phase estimate is given by (Bergaminwhere n = o, h and Nn is the number of particles counted. Accordingly, for any given observation duration and source the accuracy depends only on the fringe visibility and transmission coefficient.
Assuming that both the o and h signals are considered and that the and estimates are weighted, the measured phase is
The
of iswhere, factoring the common proportionality factor , the standard uncertainties of and are normalized as
The transmittances and are given by (27) and = .
Fig. 13 shows the histograms for the (i) and (ii) geometries (defined in Section 8.1). The manufacturing tolerances were set to u = 2 µm and we assumed that the interferometer was perfectly aligned. Because of the normalization adopted, the uncertainty associated with the estimate is always greater than one. The unit value is achieved when the interferometer geometry is ideal and the mutual yaw and pitch angles of the split crystals are null. The smallest uncertainty in Fig. 13 is less than one because we considered the of the and estimates. Crystals having the same thickness still ensure slightly better accuracy.
To investigate how the manufacturing errors affect the accuracy of the phase estimate, we repeated the Monte Carlo simulation with manufacturing errors sampled from uniform distributions having u = ±(0, 1, 2, 4, 8) µm supports. The results are recapped as violin plots in Fig. 14.
9. Discussion
For a triple Laue split-crystal interferometer, two geometries are possible, symmetric and skew-symmetric. In the symmetric one, the two mirrors are at equal distances from the splitter, that is, zM1 = zM2 (Fig. 2). In this case, the crystal splitting means the analyser is free to move. However, since the distance of the analyser from the mirrors is constrained to be the same as the splitter distance, there is no freedom to change the length of the interferometer arms. Such interferometers allowed measuring the lattice parameter of 28Si (Massa et al., 2011, 2020) and led to the determination of the (Fujii et al., 2018) and the realization of the kilogram by counting atoms (Massa et al., 2020).
To increase the arms' separation and length the skew-symmetric geometry is necessary. In this case, the interferometer consists of two independent crystal blocks, as shown in Fig. 2. Since it is insensitive to parallel translation of one block with respect to the other, they can be placed far apart, so long arms are possible and their length can also be varied in real time. This opens the way to experiments testing fundamental symmetries and interactions, such as the relation between quantum mechanics and gravity.
To align and operate the interferometer, two angles (the mutual yaw and pitch rotations, about the y vertical axis and z optical axis, respectively) must be zero. Also, the residual mechanical vibrations and the long measurement times imply that an optical interferometer must be hosted in the gap between the crystals to monitor these angles in real time and actively nullify them with, typically, sub-nanoradian accuracy. In particular, the interference phase is sensitive to the crystals' Bragg alignment. The farther apart the arms, the greater the sensitivity. Luckily, the sensitivity of both crystal and optical interferometers increases equally with arm separation. Nanoradian metrology and technologies have already been developed in the measurement of the Si lattice parameter (Ferroglio et al., 2008; Massa et al., 2009), in lattice comparators (Mendenhall et al., 2023) and in γ-ray spectroscopy (Krempel, 2011; Massa et al., 2013). However, an order of magnitude improvement is necessary.
To achieve a reasonable fringe visibility also far from the perfect Bragg alignment, Windisch & Becker (1992) proposed mirror crystals with twice the thickness of the splitter and analyser. However, the maximum visibility peak is sharper than that occurring with the equal-thickness choice. We have observed that, in both cases, the angular width of the visibility peak increases as the crystal thickness decreases.
For the first time we have quantified from first principles the effects of the source coherence and pitch misalignment of the split crystals on the visibility and phase of the interference fringes. We found that, apart from a scale factor and using a Gaussian Schell model of the source, the reciprocal-space densities of the particles leaving the interferometer are the same as those yielded by a fully coherent initial Gaussian state having a radius equal to the coherence length of the source. Unless one is interested in the spatial pattern of the interference, this significantly simplifies the analysis.
Varying the mutual pitch of the split crystals, Becker & Bonse (1974) observed unexplained travelling fringes in the integrated intensities of the beams leaving the interferometer. We did not find clues to this potentially troublesome effect. It may have been caused by an undetected parasitic change in the Bragg alignment accompanying the pitch misalignment.
The goal of interferometry is to determine the phase difference between the split beams. The minimum uncertainty depends on the interference visibility, in addition to the particle counts. The higher, the better. Therefore, we examined how the manufacturing tolerance impacts the visibility and uncertainty of the phase estimate. A 3 µm tolerance seems to be the maximum permitted before a significant loss of accuracy is observed. We also found that this tolerance is mostly insensitive to the crystal thicknesses.
10. Conclusions
Adapting the mathematical framework described in a previous paper (Sasso et al., 2022), we have modelled a split-crystal skew-symmetric interferometer and investigated its sensitivity to crystal thicknesses, misalignments and machining tolerances. Taking the source coherence and three-dimensional operation into account was necessary to quantify, from first principles, the effect of the pitch misalignment on the pattern and visibility of the interference fringes. We found that a partially coherent source is equivalent to a coherent one having a radius equal to the coherence length. This result simplified the numerical implementation of the model.
We did not consider gravity, the Coriolis force, or residual acceleration due to seismic and environmental noise. They will be the subject of future work.
Owing to the extreme sensitivity of the interference phase, operating such an interferometer requires an order of magnitude improvement in the metrology and control capabilities of the mutual yaw angle of the split crystals.
APPENDIX A
Representations of the single-particle state
The position- and reciprocal-space representations of the single-particle state |φn(z)〉 are the superpositions
and
The orthogonality and completeness of the = and = bases are expressed by the integral representations of the delta distribution
and
APPENDIX B
Free-space propagation
Propagating the Gaussian wave packet,
where l0 is the initial (z = 0) radius measured in the xy plane (assumed the same along the x and y axes), we obtain
where . The radius lz(z) and wavefront curvature 1/rz(z) depend on propagation according to
where
is the divergence.
The free-space propagation of the density matrix is given by = (Feynman, 2018; Cohen-Tannoudji et al., 2019). To give an example, let us consider the q factor of = [equation (9d)]. Hence,
After transforming it back to position space, we obtain
where
are the radius, spatial coherence and radius of curvature at a distance z, respectively.
The incoherent beam spreads like a wave packet having an initial radius equal to the correlation length ℓ0: its divergence is (31c), where ℓ0 substitutes for l0, and its spread is dictated by the coherence length ℓ0, not by the beam size w0.
The coherence length increases like the radius of a Gaussian beam having
divergence. Therefore, propagation increases coherence, though negligibly in our case. This is the content of the van Cittert–Zernike theorem.
APPENDIX C
Propagation of the density matrix
The elements of the propagated density matrix are given by the integral (19). Using the initial mixed state (9c) and writing the results of the integration as
we obtain (see Section 6 in the supporting information)
where p− = p1 − p2 and q− = q1 − q2.
By setting = and = and observing that p− = q− = 0, the reciprocal-space densities and quantum superpostions of the particles leaving the interferometer in the n = o, h state after crossing the interferometer along the i, j = 1, 2 arm or both [equation (18b)] are (see the corresponding section in the supporting information)
where, for a Gaussian Schell model of the source,
By comparing equations (11a)–(11d) and (34a)–(34h) we note that, apart from a scale factor, the reciprocal-space densities and quantum superpositions of the particles leaving an interferometer illuminated by the mixed state (9a)–(9d) are the same as those of the particles initially in a fully coherent Gaussian state having a radius equal to the coherence length ℓ0. The same is true for the total particle counts, as evident by comparing equations (15a)–(15e) and (20a)–(20e).
APPENDIX D
Shearing interferometry
As shown by (29), the visibility of the (integrated) interference fringes depends only on the coherence length ℓ0. It is independent of the radius of the interfering beams and detector distance. The reason is that the pitch misalignment of the split crystals separates the interfering beams in the vertical plane but leaves them parallel. To validate this fact, we investigate the interference of two parallel Gaussian wave packets,
spaced by Δy. The integrations over y of , and yield the mean count rates
and quantum superposition
Using (31a)–(31c) to express lz, rz and (see Appendix D in the supporting information), we obtain the visibility of the integrated interference pattern,
which is independent of the detector distance z.
In contrast, if interference occurs between the beams,
which are mutually tilted by an angle ρ0 and intersect at y = 0, the integration over y of yields (see Appendix D in the supporting information) their interference and visibility as
and
which depend on the beam size lz and thus on the detector distance z.
APPENDIX E
List of the main symbols
: position vector.
: normal to the crystal surface (optical axis).
: r component orthogonal to
d: diffracting plane spacing (Fig. 1).
Ko, Kh = Ko + h: kinematic wavevectors [equation (1a)].
: Bragg law.
: z component of Ko,h [equation (2)].
: direction cosine.
: variable conjugate to [equation (3b)].
p: resonance error [equation (3b)].
ℓ0: coherence length [equation (9b)].
χ0,h: for X-rays, the Fourier components of the periodic electric susceptibility.
υ0,h = −K2χ0,h: for neutrons, the Fourier components of the periodic Fermi pseudo-potential.
n0 = 1 + Re(χ0)/2: refractive index.
μ0 = Im(χ0)K: absorption coefficient.
ν = χh/|χh|: χh phasor [equations (4a)–(4c)].
Λe = 2πγ/(K|χh|): pendellösung length [equations (4a)–(4c)].
: dimensionless resonance error [equations (4a)–(4c)].
ζ = πz/Λe: dimensionless propagation distance [equations (4a)–(4c)].
tS, tM1, tM2, tA: crystal thicknesses.
zA, zD: analyser and detector distances from the source.
Δy: separation of the interfering rays [equation (12a)].
Δx: separation of the interfering rays [equation (14a)].
θ: rotation angle about (yaw) [equation (5b)].
ρ: rotation angle about (pitch) [equation (5b)].
ψ: rotation angle about (roll) [equation (5b)].
|φin〉, |φout〉: pure-state initial and final wavevectors [equations (8a), (8b), (10)].
: mixed-state initial and final density matrices [equations (9a)–(9d), (17)].
F(z), U0(z), X: transfer matrices (free-space, crystal, interferometer, respectively) [equations (3c), (4a)–(4c), (7a)–(7c)].
[−u, +u]: support of the manufacturing errors.
n = o, h: state components (label).
i = 1, 2: interferometer arm (label).
Supporting information
Mathematica notebook. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600576723010245/ei5097sup1.txt
PDF of rendered notebook script. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600576723010245/ei5097sup2.pdf
Acknowledgements
Open access funding provided by Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica within the CRUI-CARE Agreement. Author contributions: CPS and GM developed the theoretical formalism and performed the analytic calculations and numerical simulations. EM carried out experimental work that prompted this investigation. All authors discussed the results and contributed to the final manuscript.
Funding information
Support was received from the Austrian Research Agency (FFG project No. FO999896034) and the Ministero dell'Università e della Ricerca.
References
Authier, A. (2001). Dynamical Theory of X-ray Diffraction. Oxford University Press. Google Scholar
Bauspiess, W., Bonse, U. & Graeff, W. (1976). J. Appl. Cryst. 9, 68–80. CrossRef IUCr Journals Web of Science Google Scholar
Becker, P. & Bonse, U. (1974). J. Appl. Cryst. 7, 593–598. CrossRef IUCr Journals Web of Science Google Scholar
Becker, P., Bonse, U., Dettmer, A., Dubus, F. & Zawisky, M. (2001). Cryst. Res. Technol. 36, 589–600. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Bergamin, A., Cavagnero, G. & Mana, G. (1991). Meas. Sci. Technol. 2, 725–734. CrossRef Web of Science Google Scholar
Bonse, U. (1988). Phys. B+C, 151, 7–21. CrossRef CAS Web of Science Google Scholar
Bonse, U. & Graeff, W. (1977). X-ray Optics: Applications to Solids, Topics in Applied Physics, Vol. 22, edited by H. J. Queisser, pp. 93–143. Berlin/Heidelberg: Springer. Google Scholar
Bonse, U. & Hart, M. (1965). Appl. Phys. Lett. 6, 155–156. CrossRef Web of Science Google Scholar
Bonse, U. & Wroblewski, T. (1983). Phys. Rev. Lett. 51, 1401–1404. CrossRef CAS Web of Science Google Scholar
Bonse, U. & Wroblewski, T. (1984). Phys. Rev. D. 30, 1214–1217. CrossRef CAS Web of Science Google Scholar
Cohen-Tannoudji, C., Diu, B. & Laloë, F. (2019). Quantum Mechanics, Vol. 1, Basic Concepts, Tools, and Applications. New York: Wiley. Google Scholar
Ferroglio, L., Mana, G. & Massa, E. (2008). Opt. Express, 16, 16877–16888. Web of Science CrossRef PubMed CAS Google Scholar
Feynman, R. P. (2018). Statistical Mechanics: A Set Of Lectures. Boca Raton: CRC Press. Google Scholar
Fujii, K., Massa, E., Bettin, H., Kuramoto, N. & Mana, G. (2018). Metrologia, 55, L1–L4. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Heacock, B., Fujiie, T., Haun, R. W., Henins, A., Hirota, K., Hosobata, T., Huber, M. G., Kitaguchi, M., Pushin, D. A., Shimizu, H., Takeda, M., Valdillez, R., Yamagata, Y. & Young, A. R. (2021). Science, 373, 1239–1243. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Klein, T. (2009). Europhys. News, 40, 24–26. CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Krempel, J. (2011). PhD thesis, Fakultät für Physik, Ludwig-Maximilians Universität München, Germany. Google Scholar
Kuetgens, U. & Becker, P. (1998). Meas. Sci. Technol. 9, 1072–1075. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Lemmel, H., Jentschel, M., Abele, H., Lafont, F., Guerard, B., Sasso, C. P., Mana, G. & Massa, E. (2022). J. Appl. Cryst. 55, 870–875. Web of Science CrossRef CAS IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Mana, G. & Montanari, F. (2004). Acta Cryst. A60, 40–50. Web of Science CrossRef CAS IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Mana, G. & Vittone, E. (1997). Z. Phys. B, 102, 189–196. CrossRef CAS Web of Science Google Scholar
Mandel, L. & Wolf, E. (1995). Optical Coherence and Quantum Optics. Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar
Massa, E., Mana, G., Krempel, J. & Jentschel, M. (2013). Opt. Express, 21, 27119–27126. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Massa, E., Mana, G., Kuetgens, U. & Ferroglio, L. (2009). New J. Phys. 11, 053013. Web of Science CrossRef Google Scholar
Massa, E., Mana, G., Kuetgens, U. & Ferroglio, L. (2011). Metrologia, 48, S37–S43. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Massa, E., Sasso, C. P. & Mana, G. (2020). MAPAN, 35, 511–519. Web of Science CrossRef Google Scholar
Mendenhall, M. H., Cline, J. P., Szabo, C. I. & Henins, A. (2023). Rev. Sci. Instrum. 94, 105103. Web of Science CrossRef PubMed Google Scholar
Momose, A. (2003). Opt. Express, 11, 2303–2314. Web of Science CrossRef PubMed Google Scholar
Pignol, G., Pushin, D. A., Huber, M. G., Arif, M., Shahi, C. B., Nsofini, J., Wood, C. J., Sarenac, D. & Cory, D. G. (2015). Adv. High Energy Phys. 2015, 687480. Google Scholar
Rauch, H., Treimer, W. & Bonse, U. (1974). Phys. Lett. A, 47, 369–371. CrossRef CAS Web of Science Google Scholar
Rauch, H. & Werner, S. A. (2000). Neutron Interferometry: Lessons in Experimental Quantum Mechanics, Oxford Series on Neutron Scattering in Condensed Matter. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Google Scholar
Sasso, C. P., Mana, G. & Massa, E. (2022). J. Appl. Cryst. 55, 1500–1513. Web of Science CrossRef CAS IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Schell, A. (1967). IEEE Trans. Antennas Propag. 15, 187–188. CrossRef Web of Science Google Scholar
Sponar, S., Sedmik, R. I. P., Pitschmann, M., Abele, H. & Hasegawa, Y. (2021). Nat. Rev. Phys. 3, 309–327. Web of Science CrossRef Google Scholar
Stepanov, S. (2004). Proc. SPIE, 5536, 16–26. CrossRef Google Scholar
Tamasaku, K., Yabashi, M. & Ishikawa, T. (2002). Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 044801. Web of Science CrossRef PubMed Google Scholar
Windisch, D. & Becker, P. (1992). J. Appl. Cryst. 25, 377–383. CrossRef Web of Science IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Wolf, E. (2007). Introduction to the Theory of Coherence and Polarization of Light. Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar
Wolfram Research (2021a). Mathematica. Version 12.3.1. Wolfram Research Inc., Champaign, Illinois, USA. https://www.wolfram.com/mathematica. Google Scholar
Wolfram Research (2021b). Wolfram Player. Version 12.3.1. Wolfram Research Inc., Champaign, Illinois, USA. https://www.wolfram.com/player. Google Scholar
Yoneyama, A., Momose, A., Seya, E., Hirano, K., Takeda, T. & Itai, Y. (1999). Rev. Sci. Instrum. 70, 4582–4586. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.