After the development of the classic external interferometric configurations (
Michelson and
Mach-Zehnder interferometers) which consisted of lenses,
beam splitter, mirrors, and
corner cube, the possibility of creating a much simpler and more compact system was investigated. Starting in the 1980s, this new configuration known as retro-injection or self-mixing was explored and applications based on the retro-injection effect in commercial laser diodes appeared in the scientific literature. In this type of interferometric configuration the fact is exploited that a small fraction of the light emitted by a laser, after having been reflected by a vibrating target, is re-injected into the laser cavity, where a sort of coherent radiation detection is realized: the power emitted by the laser is in fact modulated both in amplitude (
AM) and in frequency (
FM), generating a fringes interferometric signal. This signal is a periodic function of the phase \Phi of the back-scattered field, according to the following relation: \Phi= 2ks_{0} = 2\frac{2\pi}{\lambda}s_{0} where k is the
wave number and s_{0} is the
physical distance between the laser source and the moving target. If a phase shift of an entire period is imposed, that is \Delta\Phi=2\pi, we get \Delta\text{s}=\tfrac{\lambda}{2}. So, if we can see an entire fringe on the oscilloscope screen, we can say that the phase shift due to the movement of the obstacle is 2\pi, that is \lambda/2. In this way, by counting the number of visible fringes, it is possible to calculate both the magnitude and the direction of the displacement with a resolution of \lambda/2. This was first demonstrated in 1978 by
Silvano Donati. Compared to the classic interferometers that refer to Michelson one, this new type of interferometer is considerably simpler, since the laser beam already has all the information related to the signal that is no longer generated by the beating of two beams coming from optical path difference. Therefore, the reference
optical path is no longer necessary for measurement and relies only on the interaction between the electric field that travels to the target and the electric field inside the laser cavity. == AM self-mixing laser interferometry ==