Development of compact cold-atom sensors for inertial navigation
B. Battelier, B. Barrett, L. Fouch\'e, L. Chichet, L., Antoni-Micollier, H. Porte, F. Napolitano, J. Lautier, A. Landragin, P., Bouyer

TL;DR
This paper presents a compact, mobile cold-atom sensor for inertial navigation, demonstrating first onboard measurements, integrating classical sensors, and developing a tunable laser system for enhanced practical application.
Contribution
The work introduces a portable cold-atom inertial sensor capable of onboard measurements and integrates classical sensors, advancing toward practical, full three-axis inertial measurement units.
Findings
Achieved first inertial measurements onboard an aircraft.
Demonstrated one-shot sensitivities of 2.3×10⁻⁴ g over 0.1 g range.
Developed a compact, tunable laser system for cold-atom sensors.
Abstract
Inertial sensors based on cold atom interferometry exhibit many interesting features for applications related to inertial navigation, particularly in terms of sensitivity and long-term stability. However, at present the typical atom interferometer is still very much an experiment---consisting of a bulky, static apparatus with a limited dynamic range and high sensitivity to environmental effects. To be compliant with mobile applications further development is needed. In this work, we present a compact and mobile experiment, which we recently used to achieve the first inertial measurements with an atomic accelerometer onboard an aircraft. By integrating classical inertial sensors into our apparatus, we are able to operate the atomic sensor well beyond its standard operating range, corresponding to half of an interference fringe. We report atom-based acceleration measurements along both…
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