Patent Publication Number: US-4729622-A

Title: Fiber optic polarizer with error signal feedback

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     This invention relates generally to apparatus and methods for polarizing light and particularly to fiber optic apparatus and methods for providing light of a predetermined polarization. Still more particularly, this invention relates to a polarizer system including a feedback loop which provides an error signal porportional to the intensity of a selected polarization mode propagating in the fiber and means for nulling the error signal. 
     It is well known that in many fiber optic systems, it may be desirable to have light of a known polarization state at selected points for input to components whose operation is polarization dependant to minimize errors. The state of polarization is particularly important in a device such as an optical fiber gyroscope. In a polarized optical fiber gyroscope system, drift errors due to polarization are determined by the quality of the polarizer and by the control of the state of polarization. 
     A linear polarization state is typically achieved with some type of linear polarizer such as the fiber optic polarizer described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,386,822 to Bergh. The polarization state input to the polarizer is arbitrary in general. The polarizer couples light of undesired polarizations out of the fiber and permits light having only a selected desired polarization to propagate through the fiber. If none of the incident light has the desired polarization, then the insertion loss is 100% and no signal passes through the polarizer. 
     An improved apparatus for producing light of a known polarization includes a polarization controller placed in the fiber between the light source and the polarizer with the polarization controller being adjusted to output light of the desired polarization into the polarizer. However, in a typical system, the polarization state input to the polarization controller varies due to the environmental sensitivities of the optical fiber. Variations in temperature and pressure, vibrations, and ageing of the materials may cause significant changes in the polarization output from the polarization controller to the polarizer. Therefore, in a system which includes a polarization controller fixed to vary the polarization of input light by a predetermined amount, the time varying polarization of the light input to the polarization controller causes signal fading. 
     Most fiber optic gyroscope systems thusfar demonstrated include a number of bulk optic devices. These bulk optic devices include mirrors, lenses, beam splitters, prisms, and Bragg cells, for example. Although each of the bulk optic devices needed to implement a fiber optic gyroscope system currently exists, the losses, light scatter and non-reciprocal optical properties which they introduce into the system seriously degrade the performance of the gyroscope system even when the bulk optic devices are of the finest possible optical quality. Experiments have shown that an all-optical fiber gyroscope system can achieve a noise level of about 0.001 deg/(hr) 1/2. The best bulk optics equivalent has a noise level which is many times poorer than that of the all-fiber system. 
     In addition to purely optical limitations, bulk optics elements introduce limitations on packaging size, severe design constraints in the ability to withstand the temperature range required by typical military specifications, and potential sources of vibration sensitivity. Bulk optics devices of the required quality are extremely expensive, and experience has shown that it is unlikely that significant cost reductions can be achieved in the production of such bulk optic devices. 
     The performance of a fiber optic rotation sensor depends critically upon the state of polarization in the fiber. The state of polarization in a fiber is very much dependent upon environment, but the state of polarization can be electronically controlled. 
     A fiber optic polarization controller is a 2-port device which transforms an arbitrary input state of polarization into a desired output state of polarization. This transformation is accomplished by placing two adjustable birefringent sections in the optical path. The application of anisotropic stresses to the fiber induces birefringence through the photoelastic effect. The photoelastic effect relates the change in the indices of refraction of the fiber to the applied stress. Anisotropic stresses may be applied to the fiber by squeezing the fiber or by bending the fiber around a circular form. Bending the fiber around a circular form has been used with great success in the laboratory by manual adjustment of the angular positions of the circular forms, but such polarization controllers have not been found to be suitable in the construction of small and simple servomechanism for controlling the state of polarization in an optical fiber. 
     Experiments have been done on polarization stabilization in single-mode optical fiber using two electromagnetic fiber squeezers. These experiments use bulk optic devices to examine the state of polarization of the light exiting the fiber and to provide a feedback signal to control the electromagnetic squeezers. The apparatus used in these experiments has the disadvantages of requiring access to the ends of the fiber, being excessively bulky and having a high insertion loss. 
     In order to achieve the benefits which may be derived from the all-fiber approach to optical gyroscopes, suitable optical components must be available in forms adaptable to fabrication on a single fiber in order to minimize the losses and back-scattering techniques associated with splices. The components must be relatively small, lightweight, easily packagable and capable of meeting stringent operational specifications to provide an optical gyroscope system suitable for military and civilian guidance applications. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention provides a system for polarization control in a single fiber that is suitable for use in constructing an all-fiber gyroscope system. 
     The present invention provides a fiber optic polarizer system having a linearly polarized output which is essentially constant in time. The invention includes a polarizer which uses a birefringent material in contact with a fiber optic waveguide to guide light of a first selected polarization out of the waveguide while permitting light of a second selected polarization to pass unattenuated through the fiber optic waveguide. The system uses the light radiated from the fiber into the birefringent material in the direction of propagation of the input wave as an error signal which is fed back through control circuitry to a polarization controller which controls the polarization of light incident upon the polarizer. The polarization controller preferably uses piezoelectric squeezers and includes a piezoelectric element which acts as an actuator to provide a stress to the fiber porportional to an applied electric field. Photodetectors sensitive to the wavelength of light within the birefringent material pick up the error signal and produce an electrical signal porportional to the optical power of the error signal. 
     The control circuitry processes the electrical error signal to produce control signal outputs that are applied to the polarization controller to null the error signal. Thus the polarizer system of the invention includes negative feedback circuitry which controls the polarization controller to minimize the error signal. The result is that light having the desired polarization and constant magnitude is propagated through the polarizer system for input to other optical components. 
     The present invention is a compact, all fiber optic system with no bulk optics and which accomplishes the desired result of providing constant intensity, light having a single polarization without requiring access to ends of the fiber. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of the invention; 
     FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view taken along line 2--2 of FIG. 1; 
     FIG. 3 is an elevation view of the apparatus of FIG. 2; 
     FIG. 4 is a schematic representation of a piezoelectric squeezer used to control polarization of light in an optical fiber; 
     FIG. 5 illustrates application of two piezoelectric fiber squeezers to an optical fiber to control the polarization of light propogating therethrough; 
     FIG. 6 is a schematic showing structure of the controller of FIG. 1 and connection thereof to the piezoelectric squeezers of FIG. 5; 
     FIG. 7 is a schematic illustrating a second embodiment of the controller of FIG. 1; and 
     FIG. 8 shows graphs of the error signal output to the controller circuitry as functions of various parameters. 
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
     Referring to FIG. 1, a fiber optic polarizer system 10 includes a fiber optic waveguide 12, a polarizer 14 and a pair of polarization controllers 16 and 18. 
     As best shown in FIG. 2, the fiber optic waveguide 12 is preferably a single mode optical fiber having a central core 19 and a surrounding cladding 20 as is well known in the art. For single mode operation, the core 19 typically has a diameter on the order of 1-10 microns, and the cladding 20 has a diameter on the order of 100 microns. Although the illustrated embodiment employs a single mode optical fiber having a step gradient in the index of refraction between the core and the cladding, the invention is not limited to such fibers and may be implemented with other fibers such as graded index single and multi-mode fibers. 
     A polarizer suitable for use in the present invention is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,386,822 to Bergh. The disclosure of that patent is hereby incorporated by reference herein. 
     POLARIZER 
     Referring to FIGS. 1 and 2, the polarizer 14 includes a substrate 21 having an optically flat surface 22 thereon. The fiber optic waveguide 12 is mounted within an arcuate slot 24 formed in the optically flat surface 22 of the substrate 21. Since the primary function of the substrate 21 is to hold the fiber optic waveguide 12 in a predetermined position, the substrate 21 may be formed of any suitably rigid material. In the preferred embodiment, the substrate 21 comprises a block of fused quartz; and a suitable cement, such as epoxy glue, secures the fiber optic waveguide 12 in the slot 24. 
     As best shown in FIG. 2, in the central region of the substrate 21 the depth of the slot 24 is less than the diameter of the fiber optic waveguide 12, and the outer portion of the cladding 20 is removed to form an interaction zone 26 from which light may be coupled out of the fiber optic waveguide 12. The cladding 20 is removed in the interaction zone 26 to form a flat surface 28 that is coplanar with the optically flat surface 22 of the substrate 21. At the edges of the substrate 21 the depth of the slot 24 is preferably at least as great as the diameter of the fiber optic waveguide 12 so that the cladding 20 remains intact. Therefore, the amount of cladding 20 removed increases gradually from zero at the edges of the substrate 21 to a maximum near the center thereof in the interaction zone 26. 
     A crystal 28 formed of a birefringent material is mounted on the substrate 21 in close proximity to the core 19 of the fiber optical waveguide 12 in the interaction zone 26. The crystal 28 has an optically flat surface 30 facing the optically flat surface 22 of the substrate 21. The crystal 28 is positioned to partially intersect the path of light propagating in the fiber optic waveguide 12 so that evanescent field coupling may couple light from the fiber optic waveguide into the crystal 28. In a preferred embodiment, the diameter of the core portion 19 is on the order of 4 microns, and the separation between the crystal 28 and the core 19 is on the order of 1 micron. In this embodiment, the arcuate slot 24 has a radius of curvature on the order of 20 centimeters, and the interaction region 26 between the fiber optic waveguide 12 and the crystal 28 is approximately 1 millimeter long. 
     The crystal 28 comprises a body of birefringent material in order to provide different wave velocities therein for light of different polarizations. With polarizations for which the wave velocity in the crystal 28 is less than the wave velocity in the fiber optic waveguide 12, the light carried by the fiber optic waveguide 12 excites a bulk wave in the crystal 28, which causes light to escape from the fiber optic waveguide 12. No bulk wave is excited in the crystal 28 for polarizations having wave velocities in the crystal greater than in the fiber so that light having such polarizations remains guided by the fiber optic waveguide 12. Therefore, proper selection and orientation of the crystal 28 of birefringent material causes light of a first selected polarization to be retained within the fiber optic waveguide 12 while light of a second selected polarization is removed therefrom and transmitted away from the fiber optic waveguide 12 through the crystal 28. The indices of refraction of the crystal 28 are such that a wave having polarization along one of the principal axis of the crystal 28 will propagate more slowly in the crystal 28 than in the fiber optic waveguide 12; and a wave having polarization along a second principal axis will propagate at a greater speed in the crystal 28 than in a fiber optic waveguide 12. 
     The crystal 28 is chosen to have at least one refractive index that is equal to or greater than the refractive index of the core 20 of the fiber optic waveguide 12 and a second refractive index that is equal or less than the refractive index of the cladding 20. In a preferred embodiment, the crystal 28 has one index of refraction that is greater than the index of refraction of the core 19 and two indices of refraction that are less than the index of refraction of the cladding 20. This relationship of refractive indices permits orientation of the crystal 28 to adjust the lossiness of one polarization without affecting the lossiness of other polarizations. In the illustrated embodiment, the crystal 28 is preferably cut so that the axis of the largest index of refraction lies in the plane of the optically flat surface 30. 
     In a preferred embodiment, the core 19 of the fiber optic waveguide 12 is formed of ammorphous silica having an effective index of refraction of approximately 1.46; and the crystal 28 comprises a potassium pentaborate (KB 5  O 8 .4H 2  O) crystal having the following refractive indices at a wave length of 633 nm in vacuo: n a  =1.49, n b  =1.43, and n c  =1.42, where a, b and c correspond to the axes of symmetry of the crystal 28. The crystal 28 is cut in a plane perpendicular to the vertical b axis; and the cut surface 30 is polished and placed against the fiber optic waveguide 12 in the interaction region 26. For light polarized perpendicular to the crystal-fiber interface 30, the refractive index (n b  =1.43) of the crystal 28 is less than the refractive index 1.46 of the fiber optic waveguide 12, which causes light propagating within the fiber optic waveguide 12 to remain therein because of total internal reflections at the crystal-fiber interface 30. 
     The index of refraction n for polarization parallel to the crystal-fiber interface 30 lies between n c  =1.42 and n a  =1.49 according to the following relationship: ##EQU1## where θ is the angle between the direction of propagation and the c axis of the crystal. In an effective polarizer the orientation and refractive index of the crystal 26 are chosen to make the slower wave velocity in the crystal 28 very close to the wave velocity within the fiber optic waveguide 12, since it has been found that the efficiency of coupling from the fiber optic waveguide 12 to the crystal 28 increases as the wave velocity in the crystal 28 becomes closer to the wave velocity in the fiber optic waveguide 12. 
     In a preferred method of assembly, the fiber optic waveguide 12 is bonded into the arcuate slot 24 using an appropriate cement, and the fiber optic waveguide 12 and substrate 21 are ground and polished together until the desired amount of cladding 20 has been removed from the fiber optic waveguide 12 in the interaction region 26. The polished face 30 of the crystal 28 is then placed against the surface of the substrate 21, and pressure is applied to reduce the separation therebetween to a fraction of a micron. An index matching oil having an index of refraction of approximately 1.45 is inserted between the crystal 28 and the fiber optic waveguide 12 by means of capillary action to provide optical matching between the crystal 28 and the fiber optic waveguide 12 and to reduce frictional forces that must be overcome to properly position the crystal 28 on the substrate 21. 
     Referring to FIG. 3, a transverse electromagnetic (TEM) wave typically has two modes of polarization in a single mode fiber. The light input to the polarizer 14 is represented by a first arrow 32 which indicates the direction of propagation of the light wave and a second arrow 34 perpendicular to the arrow 32 to indicate one direction of polarization. The other direction of polarization is indicated by the circle with a dot in the center thereof at the intersection of the arrows 32 and 34. The circle and dot represent a polarization vector pointing out of the plane of the page parallel to the optically flat surfaces 30 and 22. With the crystal 28 being cut and oriented with respect to the fiber optic waveguide 12 as described above, the index of refraction of the crystal 28 for light represented by the polarization vector 34 is less than the effective index of refraction of the fiber optic waveguide 12 so that light having polarization indicated by the polarization vector 34 propagates past the crystal 28 through the fiber optic waveguide 12 by means of total internal reflection at the crystal-fiber interface. For light polarized parallel to the crystal-fiber interface 30, the index of refraction of the crystal 28 is approximately equal to or greater than the effective index of refraction of the fiber so that the wave velocity in the crystal 28 for this polarization is approximately equal to or less than the wave velocity in the fiber optic waveguide 12. Therefore, light polarized parallel to the crystal-fiber interface 30 excites a bulk wave in the crystal 28 and escapes from the fiber optic waveguide 12. The result is that the light which remains within the fiber optic waveguide 12 is highly polarized in the direction perpendicular to the plane 30 of the crystal 28. 
     The extinction ratio of the polarizer 14 is the ratio of light having the undesired polarization mode retained in the fiber optic waveguide 12 to the light of the desired polarization mode retained within the fiber optic waveguide 12, assuming equal inputs of both modes into polarizer 14. The polarizer 14 constructed in accordance with the foregoing description is capable of providing an extinction ratio in excess of 80 dB, with a throughput loss of light of the desired polarization of only a few percent. The two most important parameters of the polarizer 14 are the extinction ratio and the insertion loss. Optical gyroscopic applications require extinction ratios greater than 80 dB and insertion loss of less than 10%. The polarizer 14 is capable of achieving an extinction ratio of about 100 dB while the best bulk optic polarizers have extinction ratios of about 50-60 dB. 
     POLARIZATION CONTROLLER 
     The performance of fiber optic apparatus such as inertial sensors (not shown) depends critically upon the state of polarization in the fiber. The fiber optic polarizer system 10 of the present invention electronically controls the state of polarization in the fiber optic waveguide 12, taking an arbitrary input state of polarization and transforming it into a desired output state of polarization. The polarization transformation is accomplished by placing two adjustable birefringent sections in the optical path of light guided in the fiber optic waveguide 12 to control the state of polarization input to the polarizer 14. 
     Each of the polarization controllers 16 and 18 includes a pair of fiber squeezers 35, 36 and 37, 38, respectively to apply anisotropic stresses to the fiber optic waveguide 12 to induce birefringence through the photoelastic effect. The photoelastic effect changes the indices of refraction of the fiber in response to the applied stress. Referring to FIGS. 4 and 5, each of the fiber squeezers 35-38 comprises a piezoelectric actuator element 40 mounted inside a rectangular aperture 42 in a generally rectangular frame 44. One end of the piezoelectric actuator element 40 is rigidly connected to the frame; and the other end of the piezoelectric actuator element contacts the fiber optic waveguide 12, which is held between the piezoelectric element and a portion of the frame. It is well-known that application of an electric field to a piezoelectric material produces a stress therein in a repeatable, predictable manner in response to the applied electric field. Ordinarily the stress produced in the piezoelectric actuator element 40 is proportional to the applied electric field. 
     It has been found that transformation from an arbitrary eliptical state of polarization to an arbitrary output state of polarization requires three fiber squeezers. The fiber optic polarizer system 10 includes the pair of fiber squeezers 35, 36 at one side of the polarizer 14 and the pair of fiber squeezer 37, 38 at the opposite side of the polarizer 14 to change an arbitrary state of polarization input from either direction to a specific linear state of polarization at the polarizer 14. This transformation can be accomplished with two squeezers 35, 36 provided that the birefringence existing within the fiber between the polarization controller 16 and the polarizer 14 is negligible, which is approximately true over a limited path length. If the path length is such that the birefringence of the fiber optic wave guide 12 is not negligible between the polarization controller 16 and the polarizer 14, a third squeezer (not shown) will be required to produce the desired linear state of polarization for input to the polarizer 14. The required voltage and the force per unit length exerted on the fiber to produce the desired polarization change could be reduced, or the dynamic range of the polarization contoller 16 could be extended by increasing the length of the piezoelectric actuator element. 
     Referring to FIG. 5, a pair of fiber squeezers are placed in line with the fiber optic waveguide 12 passing therethrough. Each squeezer has a defined axis for applying stress to the fiber and in order to produce the desired polarization transformation, the axis of applied stress are arranged at 45° to one another. Each squeezer achieves a phase shift which is parallel to the axes of the squeezer and a second phase shift that is perpendicular to the sqeezer axis. Therefore, the pair of fiber squeezers 35, 36 are capable of changing the polarization along two axes perpendicular to one another and to the fiber optic waveguide 12. 
     It is preferable that the piezoelectric material used in the fiber squeezer have a Curie temperature greater than 85° C. The piezoelectric effect vanishes at temperatures greater than the Curie temperature, but this specification is easily met in practice by using a material such as lead titantate or lead zirconate. Such piezoelectric materials have Curie temperatures of about 300° C. Calculations show that a piezoelectric actuator element of a practical size having a height of about 8.9 millimeters, a length of about 6.4 millimeters and a thickness of about 3.2 millimeters and applied voltage of about 10 volts produces a phase change of 180° for fibers that are about 100 microns in diameter. A dynamic range of plus or minus 720° would thus require a control voltage range of 0 to 80 volts, which would produce forces on the fiber of approximately 8×10 4  dyne/cm, which is an order of magnitude below the threshhold force for causing damage to the fiber. 
     THE CONTROL SYSTEM 
     Referring again to FIGS. 1 and 2, the crystal 28 has a pair of planes 29, 31 thereon with a first photodetector 43 mounted to the plane 29 and a second photodetector 45 being mounted to the plane 31. The first photodetector 43 is arranged to have incident thereon light which was initally propagating from left to right in the fiber optic waveguide 12 and which was subsequently coupled out of the fiber optic waveguide 12 into the crystal 28. The second photodetector 45 is arranged to have incident thereon light which was initally traveling from right to left in the fiber optic waveguide 12 and which was coupled therefrom into the crystal 28. The first photodetector 43 outputs a signal to a first controller 47, which outputs control signals to the fiber squeezers 35 and 36, which are oriented as shown in FIG. 5 with respect to the fiber optic waveguide 12. The second photodetector 45 outputs control signals to a second controller 46 which outputs control signals to the pair of fiber squeezers 37 and 38. Thus the fiber optic polarizer system 10 is capable of producing light of a desired polarization output regardless of the direction of the input light signal. 
     An arbitrary state of polarization may be represented by components E x  and E y  where E x  is represented as previously explained with reference to FIG. 3 by the encircled dot as being directed out of the plane of FIG. 3 and perpendicular to the fiber 12. E is also perpendicular to the fiber 12. The state of polarization of the incoming light may be defined by two parameters, A and Δ, where A 2  =E x   2  /E, with E being equal to E x   2  +E y   2  ; and Δ is the phase difference between the x and y polarizations. Therefore, the incoming light may be expressed in a matrix representation as ##EQU2## 
     The parameters to be controlled are Γ 1  and Γ 2 , the differences between the parallel and orthogonal phase shifts by the fiber squeezers 35, 36 with respect to the squeezer axis. As illustrated, it is desired that the light input to the polarizer 14 and the light output therefrom have a polarization only in the y-direction. As described above, the crystal 28 couples light polarized in the x-direction travelling from left to right in the fiber optic waveguide 12 out of the fiber toward the first photodetector. If all of the light input to the polarizer 14 has the desired polarization, there will be no light incident through the crystal 28 upon the first photodetector 43. Therefore, the light incident upon the first photodetector 43 results in a photodetector output that is regarded as an error signal. The first controller 47 processes the error signal and then sends control signals to the fiber squeezers 35 and 36 to null the error signal. The error signal output from the photodetector 43 is a function of the phase differences Γ 1  and Γ 2 , which are linear with respect to the control voltages applied to the fiber squeezers 35 and 36. The error signal voltage is given by 
     
         S(Γ.sub.1,Γ.sub.2)=A.sup.2 cos (Γ.sub.2 /2)+(1-A.sup.2) sin.sup.2 (Γ.sub.2 /2)-A(1-A.sup.2).sup.1/2 sin (Γ.sub.2) sin (Γ.sub.1 -Δ)                                  (2) 
    
     FIG. 8 illustrates computer plots of error signals for controlling the polarization input to the polarizer 14. Curve (a) uses Γ 2  as the variable with A=1, Δ=45° and Γ 1  =45°. Curve (b) uses Γ 1  as the variable with A=0.707, Γ=30° and Γ 2  =45°. Curve (c) uses Γ 1  as the variable with A=0, Δ=30° and Γ 2  =45°. For a given input state of polarization, the error signal varies sinusoidally with either of Γ 1  or Γ 2 . In the special cases of A=0 or A=1, the error signal is independent of Γ 1 , since in each of the special cases the coefficient of the term involving Γ 1  is 0. In these special cases, the incoming state of polarization is either parallel or orthogonal to the axis of the fiber squeezer 35. With a change in the control voltage applied to the fiber squeezer 35, the phase of the light may change by an amount equal to Γ 1 , but the state of polarization will remain constant. If the incoming state of polarization is aligned with the axes of fiber squeezer 35, Γ 2  may be at 0±2π, ±π4π, etc. to obtain the desired output. If the incoming state of polarization is orthogonal to the fiber squeezer 35, Γ 2  may be at ±π, ±3π, etc. to obtain the desired alignment of the polarization of the light in the fiber for input to the polarizer 14. 
     The control signal will be obtained by modulations of Γ 1  and Γ 2  to observe the effect on the error signal. Modulation may be accomplished by an interative system such as that shown in FIG. 7 which uses a sequential logic network 48. The output of the photodetector 40 is input to a preamplifier and filter network 50, which also receives an input from an appropriate bias network 52. The amplified and filtered signal is input to an analog to digital converter 54, which may be an 8 bit A/D converter, for input to the sequential logic network 48. The sequential logic network 48 is programmed with an algorithm that drives the fiber squeezers 35 and 36 so as to minimize the output detected therefrom. In an iterative fashion, and by amounts proportional to the detected error signal, the sequential logic network 48 alternately applies corrections to the fiber squeezers 35 and 36 through a pair of crystal drivers 56 and 58, respectively, until a minimum error signal below a preselected value is reached. Since the sampling and correction rates are preferably greater than 2,000 per second, the noise generated in the sequential logic network 48 is well above the band width of the fiber optical system for gyroscopic applications. In general the noise generated can be placed outside the signal band of interest. 
     Referring to FIG. 6, an alternative approach to nulling the error signal utilizes continuous sinusoidal modulations of 1 and 2 at selected frequencies of ω 1  and ω 2 . The output of the photodetector 43 is fed into a preamplifier 60 having an output connected to a demodulator 62. The demodulator 62 output is connected to an integrating and mixing circuit 64. A signal generator 66 outputs modulating signals at the frequencies of ω 1  and ω 2  to the demodulator 62 and to the integrating and mixing circuitry 64. The integrating and mixing circuitry 64 has outputs connected to each of the pair of crystal drivers 56 and 58 for supplying control signals to the fiber squeezers 35 and 36 respectively. Demodulation at frequencies ω 1  and ω 2  provides two control signals to drive the fiber squeezers 15 and 16 to produce the phase differences Γ 1  and Γ 2  to obtain simultaneous minima the DC error signal. 
     The polarizer system 10 according to the present invention operates according to the following specifications: 
     
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Extinction ratio      &gt;80 dB                                              
Losses                &lt;10%                                                
Control band width    500 Hz                                              
Polarization noise suppression ratio                                      
                      40 dB                                               
Cross-polarization suppression ratio                                      
                      20 dB                                               
Design wave length    820 nm                                              
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     Thus the fiber optic polarizer system 10 according to the present invention processes incoming light of an arbitrary polarization and produces an output light signal of a preselected polarization with minimal losses so that the polarizer system 10 is suitable for processing light signals for input to an all fiber gyroscope.