DocumentCode :
3200512
Title :
Latest results of the U.W.A. cryogenic sapphire oscillator
Author :
Luiten, A.N. ; Mann, A.G. ; McDonald, N.J. ; Blair, D.G.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Western Australia Univ., Nedlands, WA, Australia
fYear :
1995
fDate :
31 May-2 Jun 1995
Firstpage :
433
Lastpage :
437
Abstract :
Two nominally identical separate 12 GHz oscillators based on 5 cm diameter cryogenic sapphire resonators were compared using a double heterodyne method. Locking of the oscillator frequency to the resonator is provided by active Pound stabilization and a second servo which removes the deleterious effects of amplitude modulation generated by the phase modulator. The resonator temperature and incident microwave power are also kept under servo control. The diode detectors for the power and Pound frequency stabilization servos are adjacent to the resonator in the cryogenic environment, which eliminates their room temperature sensitivity. At short times, from 0.3 to 30 s, the Allan standard deviation is about 2.5×10-15 τ-1/2 and limited by the measurement system and servo system noise floors. At about 50 s the Allan deviation reaches a minimum of 8×10-16 . This represents frequency stabilization to better than I ppm of the resonator bandwidth. Up to 100 seconds the stability degrades as approximately 1 to 2×10-16 τ1/2, which is consistent with the earlier measurement of 4×10-15 for one oscillator against a H-maser. This medium term drift appears to be associated with a high oscillator acceleration sensitivity (~0.5 to 3×10-9 g-1) and mechanical instability of the resonator
Keywords :
automatic frequency control; circuit stability; cryogenic electronics; dielectric resonator oscillators; frequency stability; microwave oscillators; power control; sapphire; servomechanisms; temperature control; 12 GHz; 5 cm; Al2O3; Allan standard deviation; SHF oscillators; active Pound stabilization; cryogenic sapphire oscillator; diode detectors; double heterodyne method; frequency stabilization; incident microwave power; mechanical instability; oscillator acceleration sensitivity; oscillator frequency locking; power servo; resonator temperature; servo control; Amplitude modulation; Cryogenics; Envelope detectors; Measurement standards; Microwave oscillators; Phase modulation; Resonant frequency; Servomechanisms; Servosystems; Temperature sensors;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Frequency Control Symposium, 1995. 49th., Proceedings of the 1995 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2500-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/FREQ.1995.483931
Filename :
483931
Link To Document :
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