H01S3/136

NARROWED-LINE GAS LASER APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING ELECTRONIC DEVICES
20220385030 · 2022-12-01 · ·

A narrowed-line gas laser apparatus includes a laser chamber that accommodates a pair of electrodes disposed so as to face each other, an output coupling mirror, and a line narrowing apparatus that forms an optical resonator along with the output coupling mirror, the line narrowing apparatus including an optical system having a first region and a second region on which a first portion and a second portion of a light beam that exits out of the laser chamber are incident, the first and second portions passing through different positions in a direction in which the pair of electrodes face each other, the optical system being configured to suppress an increase in the distance between the optical path axis of the first portion and the optical path axis of the second portion.

METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR CONTROLLING A PULSE REPETITION RATE OF A PULSED LASER BEAM, AND PULSED LASER OSCILLATOR WITH STABILIZED PULSE REPETITION RATE
20220352687 · 2022-11-03 ·

A method is disclosed for controlling a pulse repetition rate of pulsed laser beam 1 created by pulsed laser oscillator 100, includes generating beam 1 by oscillator 100, splitting beam 1 into first pulsed split beam 1a and second pulsed split beam 1b, time-delaying split beam 1a relative to split beam 1b by optical delay device 220, generating timing baseband signal Sc including a timing jitter of the pulse repetition rate based on split beam 1a and second split beam 1b by timing detector device 230, generating feedback signal Sf based on timing baseband signal Sc, and applying feedback signal Sf on oscillator 100 and controlling the pulse repetition rate of beam 1 based on the feedback signal Sf. Furthermore, repetition rate control apparatus 200 for controlling a pulse repetition rate of pulsed laser oscillator 100 and pulsed laser oscillator 100, comprising repetition rate control apparatus 200 are described.

SINGLE-FREQUENCY LASER APPARATUS

A single-frequency laser apparatus comprises a mirror and a volume Bragg grating (VBG) reflector defining a laser cavity therebetween and an optical gain material for emitting and amplifying an intra-cavity beam in the laser cavity. The optical gain material comprises a transition-metal doped crystal such as a crystal doped with transition-metal ions selected from one or more of Ti.sup.3+ ions, Cr.sup.2+ ions, Cr.sup.3+ ions or Cr.sup.4+ ions. A reflectivity spectrum of the VBG reflector and an optical length of the laser cavity are selected so that a beam output from the laser cavity is a single-frequency output beam and/or includes only one longitudinal mode of the laser cavity. The laser apparatus may provide a robust, compact, low cost, high-power wavelength adjustable (from approximately 650 to 950 nm), narrow linewidth (<100 kHz), single frequency laser source which is suitable for a wide range of applications from laser sensing, spectroscopy, and high precision frequency metrology sectors.

SINGLE-FREQUENCY LASER APPARATUS

A single-frequency laser apparatus comprises a mirror and a volume Bragg grating (VBG) reflector defining a laser cavity therebetween and an optical gain material for emitting and amplifying an intra-cavity beam in the laser cavity. The optical gain material comprises a transition-metal doped crystal such as a crystal doped with transition-metal ions selected from one or more of Ti.sup.3+ ions, Cr.sup.2+ ions, Cr.sup.3+ ions or Cr.sup.4+ ions. A reflectivity spectrum of the VBG reflector and an optical length of the laser cavity are selected so that a beam output from the laser cavity is a single-frequency output beam and/or includes only one longitudinal mode of the laser cavity. The laser apparatus may provide a robust, compact, low cost, high-power wavelength adjustable (from approximately 650 to 950 nm), narrow linewidth (<100 kHz), single frequency laser source which is suitable for a wide range of applications from laser sensing, spectroscopy, and high precision frequency metrology sectors.

HIGH-PRECISION REPETITION RATE LOCKING APPARATUS FOR ULTRA-FAST LASER PULSE
20230114758 · 2023-04-13 ·

A high-precision repetition rate locking apparatus for an ultra-fast laser pulse includes: an electronic controlling component comprising: a standard clock, configured to provide a high-precision frequency standard; a pulse generator (PG), configured to provide an electrical pulse signal with adjustable repetition rate, pulse width and voltage magnitude; and a signal generator (SG), connected to the standard clock and the PG, and configured to provide a stable frequency signal for the PG, a phase-shift adjusting component, connected to the electronic controlling component and configured to implement phase modulation through electrically induced refractive index change; a resonant cavity component, comprising a phase shifter, a doped fiber, a laser diode, a wavelength division multiplexer and a reflector, and configured to generate a mode-locked pulse; and a detection system, configured to measure a repetition rate of an output pulse.

Methods of laser pulse development and maintenance in a compact laser resonator
11469569 · 2022-10-11 · ·

Described herein are methods for developing and maintaining pulses that are produced from compact resonant cavities using one or more Q-switches and maintaining the output parameters of these pulses created during repetitive pulsed operation. The deterministic control of the evolution of a Q-switched laser pulse is complicated due to dynamic laser cavity feedback effects and unpredictable environmental inputs. Laser pulse shape control in a compact laser cavity (e.g., length/speed of light <˜1 ns) is especially difficult because closed loop control becomes impossible due to causality. Because various issues cause laser output of these compact resonator cavities to drift over time, described herein are further methods for automatically maintaining those output parameters.

Methods of laser pulse development and maintenance in a compact laser resonator
11469569 · 2022-10-11 · ·

Described herein are methods for developing and maintaining pulses that are produced from compact resonant cavities using one or more Q-switches and maintaining the output parameters of these pulses created during repetitive pulsed operation. The deterministic control of the evolution of a Q-switched laser pulse is complicated due to dynamic laser cavity feedback effects and unpredictable environmental inputs. Laser pulse shape control in a compact laser cavity (e.g., length/speed of light <˜1 ns) is especially difficult because closed loop control becomes impossible due to causality. Because various issues cause laser output of these compact resonator cavities to drift over time, described herein are further methods for automatically maintaining those output parameters.

PULSE EQUALIZATION IN Q-SWITCHED GAS LASERS

A Q-switched gas laser apparatus with bivariate pulse equalization includes a gas laser, a sensor, and an electronic circuit. A Q-switch that switches the laser resonator between high-loss and low-loss states to generate a pulsed laser beam. The sensor obtains a measurement of the pulsed laser beam indicative of the laser pulse energy. The electronic circuitry operates the Q-switch to (a) repeatedly switch the laser resonator between the high-loss and low-loss states to set a repetition rate of laser pulses of the pulsed laser beam, (b) adjust a loss level of the low-loss state, based on the pulse energy measurement, to achieve a target laser pulse energy, and (c) adjust a duration of the low-loss state to achieve a target laser pulse duration. By adjusting both pulse energy and duration, uniform pulse energy and, if desired, uniform pulse duration are achieved over a wide range of repetition rates.

PULSE EQUALIZATION IN Q-SWITCHED GAS LASERS

A Q-switched gas laser apparatus with bivariate pulse equalization includes a gas laser, a sensor, and an electronic circuit. A Q-switch that switches the laser resonator between high-loss and low-loss states to generate a pulsed laser beam. The sensor obtains a measurement of the pulsed laser beam indicative of the laser pulse energy. The electronic circuitry operates the Q-switch to (a) repeatedly switch the laser resonator between the high-loss and low-loss states to set a repetition rate of laser pulses of the pulsed laser beam, (b) adjust a loss level of the low-loss state, based on the pulse energy measurement, to achieve a target laser pulse energy, and (c) adjust a duration of the low-loss state to achieve a target laser pulse duration. By adjusting both pulse energy and duration, uniform pulse energy and, if desired, uniform pulse duration are achieved over a wide range of repetition rates.

PASSIVELY MODE-LOCKED FIBER RING GENERATOR
20170365972 · 2017-12-21 ·

A pulsed fiber generator is configured with a unidirectional ring waveguide configured to emit a train of pulses. The ring waveguide includes multiple fiber amplifiers, chirping fiber components coupled to respective outputs of first and second fiber amplifiers, and multiple spectral filters coupled to respective outputs of the chirping components. The filters have respective spectral band passes centered around different central wavelengths so as to provide leakage of light along the ring cavity in response to nonlinear processes induced in the ring cavity. The pulse generator operates at a preliminary stage during which it is configured to develop a pitch to a signal, and at a steady stage during which it is configured to output a train of pulses through an output coupler at most once per a single round trip of the signal.