The LISA Pathfinder mission to space employs an optical metrology system
(OMS) at its core to measure the distance and attitude between two freely
floating test-masses to picometer and nanorad accuracy, respectively, within
the measurement band of [1 mHz, 30 mHz]. The OMS is based upon an ultra-stable
optical bench with 4 heterodyne interferometers from which interference signals
are read-out and processed by a digital phase-meter. Laser frequency noise,
power fluctuations and optical path-length variations are suppressed to
uncritical levels by dedicated control loops so that the measurement
performance approaches the sensor limit imposed by the phase-meter. The system
design is such that low frequency common mode noise which affects the read-out
phase of all four interferometers is generally well suppressed by subtraction
of a reference phase from the other interferometer signals. However, high
frequency noise directly affects measurement performance and its common mode
rejection depends strongly on the relative signal phases. We discuss how the
data from recent test campaigns point towards high frequency phase noise as a
likely performance limiting factor which explains some important performance
features.Comment: 13 pages, one columns, single space, 6 figures (color