H01S3/1307

LASER DEVICE

A laser device includes element circuits, a front optical system, and a reflective optical system. The front optical system forms a plurality of light beams by collimating a plurality of phase modulated light signals input from the element circuits, and generate a plurality of partially reflected light signals by partially reflecting the plurality of phase modulated light signals. The reflective optical system multiplexes the input local oscillation light with the plurality of partially reflected light signals by reflecting the local oscillation light in a direction of the front optical system. The element circuits can convert each of a plurality of interference light signals generated by multiplexing of the plurality of partially reflected light signals and the local oscillation light into a plurality of electric signals, and can detect a phase error between the plurality of electric signals and a reference signal.

ULTRASTABLE LASER SYSTEM BASED ON POLARIZATION-MAINTAINING OPTICAL FIBER
20220311202 · 2022-09-29 ·

An ultrastable laser system is based on a polarization-maintaining optical fiber. The ultrastable laser system comprises a laser device; acousto-optic modulators, a first beam splitter, a polarizer, an optical fiber interferometer comprising a second beam splitter, an optical fiber delay line, a third acousto-optic modulator, and a beam combiner; a beam combiner, a polarization beam splitter, photoelectric detectors, a frequency synthesizer, frequency mixers, a servo feedback circuit and a piezoelectric ceramic. The temperature interference is eliminated based on the characteristic that refractive indexes of a fast axis and a slow axis of the polarization-maintaining optical fiber differently change with a temperature, a vacuum structure can be avoided, and the ultrastable laser system has low cost, small system, simple structure and high signal stability.

Hybrid spectral and coherent beam combiner utilizing 1D fiber arrays

A system includes N master oscillators to generate N master oscillator driving signals. The system includes N splitters to split each of the N master oscillator signals into M coherent signals with M being a positive integer greater than one. A modulator and fiber amplifier stage adjusts the relative phases of the M coherent signals and generates M×N amplified signals. The M×N amplified signals are aggregated into M clusters of N fibers. The system includes M spectral beam combination (SBC) modules to combine each of the M clusters. Each SBC module combines the M×N amplified signals at N wavelengths and generates M tiled output beams. Each SBC module employs a single dimensional (1D) fiber optic array to transmit one cluster of N amplified signals from the M signal clusters and generates one tiled output beam of the M tiled output beams.

Optical frequency comb assembly and method

Operating an optical frequency comb assembly includes operating an optical frequency comb source to generate laser light constituting an optical frequency comb and introducing the laser light into a common light path and seeding at least one branch light path by the laser light from the common light path, the branch light path comprising at least one optical element. For the branch light path, a phase difference of a first frequency mode ν.sub.1 of the optical frequency comb is determined between laser light coupled out at a reference point within the frequency comb assembly upstream of the at least one optical element and laser light coupled out at a measurement point provided in the branch light path downstream of the at least one optical element. Phase correction for the laser light from the branch light path is based on a deviation of the determined phase difference from a target value.

Compact fiber short pulse laser sources
09819141 · 2017-11-14 · ·

Examples of robust self-starting passively mode locked fiber oscillators are described. In certain implementations, the oscillators are configured as Fabry-Perot cavities containing an optical loop mirror on one cavity end and a bulk mirror or saturable absorber on the other end. The loop mirror can be further configured with an adjustable line phase delay to optimize modelocking. All intra-cavity fiber(s) can be polarization maintaining. Dispersion compensation components such as, e.g., dispersion compensation fibers, bulk diffraction gratings or fiber Bragg gratings may be included. The oscillators may include a bandpass filter to obtain high pulse energies when operating in the similariton regime. The oscillator output can be amplified and used whenever high power short pulses are required. For example the oscillators can be configured as frequency comb sources or supercontinuum sources. In conjunction with repetition rate modulation, applications include dual scanning delay lines and trace gas detection.

METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR GENERATING A HIGH LASER POWER

According to the invention, a plurality of elementary laser beams (f.sub.i) are generated, the phases of which are adjusted by an electro-optical feedback loop (6, 7i, 8i, 9) implementing the matrix equation of a phase-contrast filtering device (6).

ARRAY TYPE WAVELENGTH CONVERTING LASER DEVICE

A device includes: at least one laser element with light emitting points to output fundamental waves in a one-dimensional array; a wavelength converting element to carry out wavelength conversion of the incident fundamental waves, and to output wavelength converted light rays; and an output mirror to reflect the fundamental waves, and to transmit the wavelength converted light rays resulting from the wavelength conversion by the wavelength converting element. The wavelength converting element is disposed between the laser element and the output mirror, and the distance between the position of a waist of the fundamental waves output from the laser element and the output mirror is set in accordance with a Talbot condition under which the adjacent light emitting points cause phase synchronization with each other.

High accuracy, high precision, low drift, and concurrent wavelength measurement of a sweeping tunable laser

A tunable laser wavelength measurement system includes an interferometric wavelength tracking system that uses a combination of interferometric and wavelength reference measurements to directly measure the laser output wavelength, The measurement exhibits the following desirable error signal characteristics: directional information, continuity, low latency, absolute information, high accuracy, high precision, and little or no drift, A tunable laser wavelength control system additionally incorporates electronics to compare the measured laser wavelength to a desired wavelength or wavelength function, and to generate a feedback control signal to control the wavelength of the laser output based on the comparison. In one non-limiting example implementation, the desired wavelength function is repetitive. The difference between the desired wavelength function and the interferometrically-measured wavelength function is taken, and a successive approximation technique is employed to calculate and adjust a repetitive controlling signal to obtain the desired wavelength function.

OPTICAL COMB CARRIER ENVELOPE-OFFSET FREQUENCY CONTROL USING INTENSITY MODULATION
20170264070 · 2017-09-14 ·

A system for optical comb carrier envelope offset frequency control includes a mode-locked oscillator. The mode-locked oscillator produces an output beam using an input beam and one or more control signals. The output beam includes a controlled carrier envelope offset frequency. A beat note generator produces a beat note signal using a portion of the output beam. A control signal generator produces the one or more control signals to set the beat note signal by modulating the intensity of the input beam within the mode locked oscillator. Modulating the intensity comprises using a Mach-Zehnder intensity modulator or using an intensity modulated external laser to affect a gain medium within the mode-locked laser.

High-gain single planar waveguide (PWG) amplifier laser system
11211763 · 2021-12-28 · ·

A system includes a master oscillator configured to generate a first optical beam and a beam controller configured to modify the first optical beam. The system also includes a PWG amplifier configured to receive the modified first optical beam and generate a second optical beam having a higher power than the first optical beam. The second optical beam has a power of at least about ten kilowatts. The PWG amplifier includes a single laser gain medium configured to generate the second optical beam. The system further includes a feedback loop configured to control the master oscillator, PWG amplifier, and beam controller. The feedback loop includes a laser controller. The laser controller may be configured to process wavefront information or power in bucket information associated with the second optical beam to control an adaptive optic or perform a back-propagation algorithm to provide wavefront correction at an output of the PWG amplifier.