6533b872fe1ef96bd12d2edf

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Frequency Stability Measurement of Cryogenic Sapphire Oscillators with a Multichannel Tracking DDS and the Two-Sample Covariance

Claudio E. CalossoChristophe FluhrEnrico RubiolaFrancois VernotteVincent GiordanoBenoit Dubois

subject

[SPI.OTHER]Engineering Sciences [physics]/OtherTime delay and integrationPhysicsPhysics - Instrumentation and DetectorsAcoustics and UltrasonicsNoise measurementAutomatic frequency controlFOS: Physical sciences020206 networking & telecommunicationsInstrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det)02 engineering and technologyCovarianceTopology01 natural sciencesStability (probability)Background noiseDirect digital synthesizer0103 physical sciences0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-INS-DET]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Instrumentation and Detectors [physics.ins-det]Electrical and Electronic EngineeringAllan variance010301 acousticsInstrumentation

description

This article shows the first measurement of three 100 MHz signals exhibiting fluctuations from 2E-16 to parts in 1E-15 for integration time tau between 1 s and 1 day. Such stable signals are provided by three Cryogenic Sapphire Oscillators (CSOs) operating at about 10 GHz, also delivering the 100 MHz output via a dedicated synthesizer. The measurement is made possible by a 6-channel Tracking DDS (TDDS) and the two-sample covariance tool, used to estimate the Allan variance. The use of two TDDS channels per CSO enables high rejection of the instrument background noise. The covariance outperforms the Three-Cornered Hat (TCH) method in that the background converges to zero "out of the box," with no need of the hypothesis that the instrument channels are equally noisy, nor of more sophisticated techniques to estimate the background noise of each channel. Thanks to correlation and averaging, the instrument background (AVAR) rolls off with a slope 1/sqrt(m), the number of measurements, down to 1E-18 tau = 1E4 s. For consistency check, we compare the results to the traditional TCH method beating the 10 GHz outputs down to the MHz region. Given the flexibility of the TDDS, our methods find immediate application to the measurement of the 250 MHz output of the FS combs.

https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01871758