Patent classifications
H01S3/0804
INTERMODE LOSS DIFFERENCE COMPENSATION FIBER, OPTICAL AMPLIFIER, AND TRANSMISSION PATH DESIGN METHOD
Provided is a differential modal attenuation compensation fiber that has a simple structure and can reduce MDL while eliminating the need for precise alignment work, an optical amplifier, and a transmission line design method. The differential modal attenuation compensation fiber according to the present invention, imparts excess loss to a desired propagation mode by forming a cavity portion or a ring-shaped high refractive index portion in a core of an optical fiber. By forming the cavity portion or the ring-shaped high refractive index portion in a part of the profile of the core, electric field distribution of a particular mode propagating through the fiber can be controlled, and different losses can be imparted to different propagation modes at an interface between the cavity portion or the ring-shaped high refractive index portion and a region not including the cavity portion or the ring-shaped high refractive index portion.
Laser with a gain medium layer doped with a rare earth metal with upper and lower light-confining features
One illustrative laser disclosed herein includes a gain medium layer having a first width in a transverse direction that is orthogonal to a laser emitting direction of the laser, and an upper light-confining structure positioned above an upper surface of the gain medium layer, wherein the upper light-confining structure has a second width in the transverse direction that is equal to or less than the first width and comprises at least one material having an index of refraction that is at least 2.0. The laser also includes a lower light-confining structure positioned below a lower surface of the gain medium layer, wherein the lower light-confining structure has a third width in the transverse direction that is equal to or less than the first width and comprises at least one material having an index of refraction that is at least 2.0.
Multi-stage optical fiber amplifier
The present disclosure relates to a fiber encapsulation mechanism for energy dissipation in a fiber amplifying system. One example embodiment includes an optical fiber amplifier. The optical fiber amplifier includes an optical fiber that includes a gain medium, as well as a polymer layer that at least partially surrounds the optical fiber. The polymer layer is optically transparent. In addition, the optical fiber amplifier includes a pump source. Optical pumping by the pump source amplifies optical signals in the optical fiber and generates excess heat and excess photons. The optical fiber amplifier additionally includes a heatsink layer disposed adjacent to the polymer layer. The heatsink layer conducts the excess heat away from the optical fiber. Further, the optical fiber amplifier includes an optically transparent layer disposed adjacent to the polymer layer. The optically transparent layer transmits the excess photons away from the optical fiber.
FIBER LASER SYSTEM WITH MECHANISM FOR INDUCING PARASITIC LIGHTS LOSSES
A method of inducing light losses at a parasitic wavelength in a fiber laser system includes providing a wavelength discriminator (WD) spaced from and between feeding and process fibers or from the end output of the feeding fiber so as to induce losses of light at parasitic wavelength. The device implementing the disclosed method is configured with a laser source, the delivery fiber and WD spaced at a distance between the surface to be treated and the end of the delivery fiber, wherein the WD receives the parasitic light over free space and is configured as a dichroic filter inducing losses to the light at the parasitic wavelength.
Multimode fiber, optical amplifier, and fiber laser
An object is to improve the efficiency of amplification by rare earth ion while maintaining beam quality of output light in a multi-mode fiber doped with rare earth ion. A multi-mode fiber (11) that includes a rare-earth-ion-doped core and that has a normalized frequency of not less than 2.40 includes a filter portion (111) that is formed by bending a partial section of or entirety of the multi-mode fiber (11), the filter portion (111) having a smallest diameter (diameter R1) that is set so that (1) only LP01, LP11, LP21, and LP02 modes propagate or only LP01 and LP11 modes propagate and (2) a loss of a highest-order one of the modes that propagate is not more than 0.1 dB/m.
LASER SYSTEM PROVIDING A SHAPED INTENSITY PROFILE OF AN OUTPUT BEAM WITHIN AN UNSTABLE OPTICAL RESONATOR LAYOUT AND METHOD THEREOF
The present invention relates to a laser system and a method of generating a defined spatial mode-shaped laser beam using an unstable laser resonator layout. The laser system for mode shaping of a laser beam within an unstable optical resonator layout comprising an active medium, characterized in that, the active media comprises a pumped area, wherein the gain distribution is generated by an optical pump beam's spatially intensity profile.
In a preferred embodiment, the system may further comprise an end-pumped layout to deliver the spatially shaped optical pump beam to the active medium; and/or an active element and/or a passive element for modifying the resonator losses; and/or means of output coupling of a laser beam from said unstable resonator layout.
The system according to the present invention is suitable to deliver a top-hat beam profile.
Fiber encapsulation mechanism for energy dissipation in a fiber amplifying system
The present disclosure relates to a fiber encapsulation mechanism for energy dissipation in a fiber amplifying system. One example embodiment includes an optical fiber amplifier. The optical fiber amplifier includes an optical fiber that includes a gain medium, as well as a polymer layer that at least partially surrounds the optical fiber. The polymer layer is optically transparent. In addition, the optical fiber amplifier includes a pump source. Optical pumping by the pump source amplifies optical signals in the optical fiber and generates excess heat and excess photons. The optical fiber amplifier additionally includes a heatsink layer disposed adjacent to the polymer layer. The heatsink layer conducts the excess heat away from the optical fiber. Further, the optical fiber amplifier includes an optically transparent layer disposed adjacent to the polymer layer. The optically transparent layer transmits the excess photons away from the optical fiber.
Generation of high-power spatially-restructurable spectrally-tunable beams in a multi-arm-cavity vecsel-based laser system
A collinear T-cavity VECSEL system generating intracavity Hermite-Gaussian modes at multiple wavelengths, configured to vary each of these wavelengths individually and independently. A mode converter element and/or an astigmatic mode converter is/are aligned intracavity to reversibly convert the Gaussian modes to HG modes to Laguerre-Gaussian modes, the latter forming the system output having any of the wavelengths provided by the spectrum resulting from nonlinear frequency-mixing intracavity (including generation of UV, visible, mid-IR light). The laser system delivers Watt-level output power in tunable high-order transverse mode distribution.
Fiber laser system with mechanism for inducing parasitic light losses
A method of inducing light losses at a parasitic wavelength in a fiber laser system includes providing a wavelength discriminator (WD) spaced from and between feeding and process fibers or from the end output of the feeding fiber so as to induce losses of light at parasitic wavelength. The device implementing the disclosed method is configured with a laser source, the delivery fiber and WD spaced at a distance between the surface to be treated and the end of the delivery fiber, wherein the WD receives the parasitic light over free space and is configured as a dichroic filter inducing losses to the light at the parasitic wavelength.
Radio frequency slab laser
A radio-frequency, RF, slab laser 10 with a Z-fold resonator cavity defined by an output mirror 32, a first fold mirror 34, a second fold mirror 36 and a rear mirror 30. The second fold mirror 36 is rotated by an adjustment angle away from the angle it would have if the mirrors were all plane mirrors and directed the round trip beam path by direct reflection. Moreover, the rear mirror 30 is rotated by an adjustment angle that is approximately twice the adjustment angle of the second fold mirror 36. These rotations of the rear mirror 30 and second fold mirror 36 suppresses parasitic mode paths that would otherwise exist.