interferomeeter
Interferomeeter is a device designed to measure interference of coherent waves by splitting an incoming wave and recombining the paths to produce an interference, or fringe, pattern. The term appears in some technical discussions as a variant or extension of the standard interferometer, with emphasis on precise phase measurement across broad spectral ranges or with time-domain modulation.
Principle: It uses beamsplitters, mirrors, and detectors; path length difference ΔL leads to phase difference φ = (2π/λ)
Configurations: Mach-Zehnder, Michelson, Sagnac variants; multi-pass, or arrayed interferomeeter with multiple baselines for two-dimensional measurements.
Applications: metrology, surface topography, refractive index sensing, vibration analysis, gravitational wave–like experiments at smaller scales, interferometric
Advantages: high sensitivity to path-length changes, compatibility with various wavelengths, potential for on-chip integration.
Limitations: requires coherent source; sensitive to environmental perturbations; calibration and alignment complexities; dynamic range limited by
History and status: The term is much less common than interferometer; in contemporary literature most practitioners