Patent classifications
H01S5/065
OPTOELECTRONIC DEVICES WITH TUNABLE OPTICAL MODE AND CARRIER DISTRIBUTION IN THE WAVEGUIDES
Solid-state optical devices (10) enable tuning of an electrically tunable depletion region (200) to reduce and block lateral (in-junction) carrier spreading. This capability reduces the negative effects of gain-guiding in the junction plane and reduces an astigmatism of an emitted light beam. The tunable depletion region is created by forming a highly resistive Schottky contact (105, 110) or metal-insulator-semiconductor (MIS) structure (205, 210) next to a waveguide (optical mode propagation) and current injection region (215), where lateral spread due to diffusion is expected. The depletion region area is tuned by applying a bias to the highly resistive Schottky contact or the MIS contact structure. Such contacts or similar lossy structures reduce in-junction plane gain-guiding also when unbiased by creating additional optical loss for the mode, thus reducing the effective carrier density participating in light generation, thereby reducing astigmatism.
PULSED LASER
An apparatus for emitting pulsed electromagnetic laser radiation includes a laser gain element; an optical arrangement defining a laser resonator and arranged to re-direct radiation emitted by the gain element along a beam path back onto the gain element, the optical arrangement comprising an output coupler configured to couple a portion of the radiation in the laser resonator out of the laser resonator; and, a pump arrangement configured to pump the laser gain element. The optical arrangement includes a mode locker placed in the laser resonator in the beam path, and a birefringent element placed in the laser resonator in the beam path.
System and method for stabilizing mode locked swept laser for OCT medical imaging
An optical coherence analysis system uses a laser swept source that is constrained to operate in a stable mode locked condition by modulating a drive current to the semiconductor optical amplifier as function of wavelength or synchronously with the drive voltage of the laser's tunable element based on stability map for the laser.
Optical device
A narrow linewidth laser in which an all-optical feedback line-up is used to improve the linewidth from a conventional laser source, such as a laser diode. The feedback line-up comprises an optical device having a controllable unbalanced optical coupler arranged on a cavity input path to couple a source signal from the laser source into the optical cavity, and to couple a seed signal received back from the optical cavity into the laser source. The seed signal has a lower power than the source signal. The unbalanced optical coupler may be an optical isolator arranged to couple the seed signal into the laser source at a power level selected to promote preferential stimulated emission within a narrower linewidth. By controlling the power of seed signal such that only a small portion thereof influences the lasing cavity, the narrowing effect of the preferential stimulated emission can be enhanced.
Semiconductor laser element
A semiconductor laser element includes a stacked structure body, a second electrode 62, and a first electrode 61; a ridge stripe structure 71 formed of at least part of the stacked structure body is formed; a side structure body 72 formed of the stacked structure body is formed on both sides of the ridge stripe structure 71; the second electrode 62 is separated into a first portion for sending a direct current to the first electrode via a light emitting region and a second portion 62B for applying an electric field to a saturable absorption region; a protection electrode 81 is formed on a portion adjacent to the second portion 62B of the second electrode of at least one side structure body 72; and an insulating layer 56 made of an oxide insulating material is formed to extend from on a portion of the ridge stripe structure 71 to on a portion of the side structure body 72, on which portions neither the second electrode nor the protection electrode 81 is formed.
Semiconductor laser element
A semiconductor laser element includes a stacked structure body, a second electrode 62, and a first electrode 61; a ridge stripe structure 71 formed of at least part of the stacked structure body is formed; a side structure body 72 formed of the stacked structure body is formed on both sides of the ridge stripe structure 71; the second electrode 62 is separated into a first portion for sending a direct current to the first electrode via a light emitting region and a second portion 62B for applying an electric field to a saturable absorption region; a protection electrode 81 is formed on a portion adjacent to the second portion 62B of the second electrode of at least one side structure body 72; and an insulating layer 56 made of an oxide insulating material is formed to extend from on a portion of the ridge stripe structure 71 to on a portion of the side structure body 72, on which portions neither the second electrode nor the protection electrode 81 is formed.
GENERATING OPTICAL PULSES VIA A SOLITON STATE OF AN OPTICAL MICRORESONATOR COUPLED WITH A CHIP BASED SEMICONDUCTOR LASER
A light pulse source and method for generating repetitive optical pulses are described. The pulse source includes a continuous wave (cw) laser device, an optical waveguide optically coupled with the laser device, an optical microresonator, and a tuning device. The optical microresonator coupling cw laser light via the waveguide into the microresonator, which may include a light field in a soliton state with soliton shaped pulses coupled out of the microresonator for providing the repetitive optical pulses. The laser device includes a chip based semiconductor laser, the microresonator and/or the waveguide may reflect an optical feedback portion of light back to the semiconductor laser, which may provide self-injection locking relative to a resonance frequency of the microresonator. The tuning device is arranged for tuning at least one of a driving current and a temperature of the semiconductor laser such that the microresonator may provide the soliton state.
Semiconductor-laser-device assembly
A semiconductor-laser-device assembly includes a mode-locked semiconductor-laser-element assembly including a mode-locked semiconductor laser element, and a dispersion compensation optical system, on which laser light emitted from the mode-locked semiconductor laser element is incident and from which the laser light is emitted; and a semiconductor optical amplifier having a layered structure body including a group III-V nitride-based semiconductor layer, the semiconductor optical amplifier configured to amplify the laser light emitted from the mode-locked semiconductor-laser-element assembly.
Semiconductor-laser-device assembly
A semiconductor-laser-device assembly includes a mode-locked semiconductor-laser-element assembly including a mode-locked semiconductor laser element, and a dispersion compensation optical system, on which laser light emitted from the mode-locked semiconductor laser element is incident and from which the laser light is emitted; and a semiconductor optical amplifier having a layered structure body including a group III-V nitride-based semiconductor layer, the semiconductor optical amplifier configured to amplify the laser light emitted from the mode-locked semiconductor-laser-element assembly.
Optoelectronic oscillator
An optoelectronic oscillator for generating an optical and/or electric pulse comb, comprising a monolithically integrated passively mode-coupled semiconductor laser and an optical feedback loop which guides a part of the optical radiation of the semiconductor laser and feeds said part back into the semiconductor laser as feedback pulses. Without the influence of the feedback pulses, the semiconductor laser would emit comb-like optical pulses, hereafter referred to as primary pulses, and in the event of an influence, emits comb-like output pulses which have been influenced by the feedback pulses, said output pulses having a lower temporal jitter or less phase noise than the primary pulses. The feedback loop is damped between 27.5 and 37.5 dB, and the time lag of the feedback loop is selected such that each feedback pulse is incident within the temporal half-value width of each subsequent primary pulse.