Sagnac experiment with electrons: Observation of the rotational phase shift of electron waves in vacuum

Abstract
A Sagnac experiment with electron waves in vacuum is reported. The phase shift caused by rotation of an electron biprism interferometer placed on a turntable has been measured. It was found to agree with prediction within error margins of about 30%. A compact ruggedized electron interferometer was used. It is based on a high-precision optical bench of 36-cm length. This interferometer is less sensitive by orders of magnitude to mechanical vibrations and electromagnetic stray fields than conventional electron interferometers. A beam of low-energy electrons (150–3000 eV) emitted by a field-emission electron source was used. For the most part, electrostatic electron optical components were employed. The magnified interference fringe pattern was intensified by a dual-stage multichannel-plate intensifier, recorded by a charge-coupled-device video camera, transmitted from the turntable to the laboratory system via a slip ring, and evaluated by an image-processing system. Both the rotation rate and the area enclosed between the two partial waves were varied (up to values of 0.5 s1 and 3.9 mm2, respectively). Fringe shifts on the order of 5% of a fringe period were attained. Some historical aspects of the Sagnac effect as well as some aspects of its interpretation are mentioned. A brief informal discussion is included of the interpretation of the Sagnac phase shift as a geometric phase (‘‘Berry phase’’) caused by the global anholonomy of the local phase factor that is produced by the gauge field induced by rotation.