Definition
A solid-state rotation-sensing device built into a single block of glass-ceramic material, in which two laser beams travel in opposite directions around a closed triangular path. When the unit rotates, the two beams take slightly different times to complete the loop, and that timing difference is measured to determine the rate and direction of rotation about one axis. Three MRLGs mounted on perpendicular axes provide the rotation data used by an Attitude and Heading Reference System (AHRS).
Plain English
A sensor with no moving parts that uses two laser beams running in opposite directions inside a single solid block to detect how fast the aircraft is turning. Three of them together tell the aircraft systems exactly how it is rotating in all directions.
Context Anchor
Seen in AHRS diagrams and instrument-system descriptions, especially where the handbook explains the sensors that feed electronic attitude and heading displays.
Derivation
Monolithic comes from the Greek monos (single) and lithos (stone) — meaning made from one solid piece. Ring describes the closed loop the laser beams travel around. Gyro is short for gyroscope, from the Greek gyros (circle) and skopein (to observe) — a device that senses rotation. Together: a rotation sensor built as one solid block with a laser ring inside.
Why Pilots Care
Supplies reliable attitude and heading information essential for instrument flight while eliminating the maintenance and failure modes of older mechanical gyros.
Analogy
Think of two people running around the same track in opposite directions. If the track itself starts turning, one runner effectively has a slightly different trip than the other. An MRLG uses a similar idea with light instead of runners.
Grounding Statement
Inside the unit, light travels around a tiny closed loop, and changes in that light tell the system that the airplane has rotated.
Intuition Check
Monolithic does not mean large or heavy here. It means the gyro’s light path is built into one solid piece, which helps make the measurement stable.
Example Sentence 1
The AHRS in this aircraft uses three MRLGs to sense rotation about the pitch, roll, and yaw axes.
Example Sentence 2
Maintenance crews check the MRLG output during preflight to confirm the heading reference is accurate before departure.