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Musical instrument recordings made with a fiber Fabry-Perot cavity: photonic guitar pickup
Author(s) -
Nicholas Ballard,
Daniel PazSoldan,
Peter Küng,
HansPeter Loock
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
applied optics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0003-6935
DOI - 10.1364/ao.49.002198
Subject(s) - optics , optical fiber , pickup , fabry–pérot interferometer , transducer , fiber optic sensor , instrumentation (computer programming) , acoustics , materials science , guitar , laser , physics , computer science , artificial intelligence , image (mathematics) , operating system
A 1 cm long, low-finesse fiber-optic cavity was used as a transducer for the vibrations of the soundboard of an acoustic guitar and of a violin. The reflected light is detected and then amplified and recorded using conventional audio instrumentation. The fiber-optic pickup is found to have a high response range in both amplitude (up to 100 microm displacement) and audio frequency (DC to 20 kHz) and good linearity up to a displacement of 225 microm. The audio noise is found to arise from the fiber-optic cables and, to a lesser extent, from the laser and laser driver.

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