Patent classifications
H01S3/06725
Pulse configurable fiber laser unit
A pulse configurable laser unit is an environmentally stable, mechanically robust, and maintenance-free ultrafast laser source for low-energy industrial, medical and analytical applications. The key features of the laser unit are a reliable, self-starting fiber oscillator and an integrated programmable pulse shaper. The combination of these components allows taking full advantage of the laser's broad bandwidth ultrashort pulse duration and arbitrary waveform generation via spectral phase manipulation. The source can routinely deliver near-TL, sub-60 fs pulses with megawatt-level peak power. The output pulse dispersion can be tuned to pre-compensate phase distortions down the line as well as to optimize the pulse profile for a specific application.
Femtosecond pulse stretching fiber oscillator
A pulse stretching fiber oscillator (or laser cavity) may comprise a chirped fiber Bragg grating (CFBG) and an optical circulator arranged such that a first portion of a beam that is transmitted through the CFBG continues to propagate through the laser cavity while a second portion of the beam that is reflected from the CFBG is stretched and chirped by the CFBG and directed out of the laser cavity by the optical circulator. Accordingly, a configuration of the CFBG and the optical circulator in the laser cavity may enable pulse stretching contemporaneous with outcoupling, which may prevent deleterious nonlinear phase from accumulating prior to stretching.
PASSIVE MODE-COUPLED FIBER OSCILLATOR AND LASER DEVICE HAVING SUCH A FIBER OSCILLATOR
A passive mode-coupled fiber oscillator includes a bidirectional loop, a unidirectional loop, and a 3x3 coupler. The bidirectional loop and the unidirectional loop are coupled to one another via the 3x3 coupler. The bidirectional loop includes a first amplification fiber that is doped using at least one element selected from the group consisting of ytterbium, neodymium, erbium, thulium, and holmium. The fiber oscillator further includes a dispersion compensation element. The fiber oscillator has an anomalous dispersion overall.
Optical receiver using a photonic integrated circuit with array of semiconductor optical amplifiers
In one embodiment, an intensity modulated (IM) direct detection (DD) optical receiver using a photonic integrated circuit (PIC) with an array of semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs) for flexible chromatic dispersion compensation (CDC) is provided. The PIC comprises an 1:N optical splitter to split an input optical signal into N copies; an array of N semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs) to receive the N optical outputs from the optical splitter; an array of optical delay lines to receive the outputs from the N SOAs, wherein the delay coefficients for the array of optical delay lines are {0, T, 2T, . . . (N−1) T}, where T=½B, where B is the system symbol rate, and each optical path with odd index (1, 3, 5, . . . N−1) from the N optical paths includes a 90-degree phase-shifter; and an optical N:1 coupler to re-combine all N optical paths. A method for automatically controlling a PIC based on the feedback signal from the Rx DSP in an optical receiver is also provided.
MICROSTRUCTURED OPTICAL FIBER, SUPERCONTINUUM LIGHT SOURCE COMPRISING MICROSTRUCTURED OPTICAL FIBER AND USE OF SUCH LIGHT SOURCE
A microstructured optical fiber for generating supercontinuum light. The optical fiber includes a core and a cladding region surrounding the core. The optical fiber includes a first fiber length section, a second fiber length section as well as an intermediate fiber length section between said first and second fiber length sections. The first fiber length section has a core with a first characteristic core diameter larger than about 7 μm. The second fiber length section has a core with a second characteristic core diameter, smaller than said first characteristic core diameter. The intermediate length section of the optical fiber includes a core which is tapered from said first characteristic core diameter to the second characteristic core diameter over a tapered length. Also, a supercontinuum light source including an optical fiber and a pump light source.
Figure eight laser
A figure-8 laser is configured in which gain in the uni-directional loop can be removed while maintaining mode-locked operation with gain only in the bi-directional nonlinear amplifying loop. Simplified self-starting and control over pulse characteristics by controlling gain in the bi-directional loop is made possible.
FIBER LASER SYSTEM BASED ON SOLITONIC PASSIVE MODE-LOCKING
A fiber laser system based in solitonic passive mode-locking, including a laser diode to emit and deliver an optical signal of a first wavelength; a single-fiber laser cavity including a dichroic mirror, a SESAM and a polarization maintaining highly-doped active fiber, to receive the emitted signal and to emit a pulsed optical signal of a second wavelength, generating laser light in the form of mode-locked ultrashort pulses; a unit coupling the laser diode to the single-fiber laser cavity; and an isolator device protecting the cavity from back reflections. The solitonic mode-locked ultrashort pulses are comprised in a range of 100 fs<10 ps with repetition rates of hundreds MHz to tens of GHz.
NONLINEAR ULTRAFAST FIBER AMPLIFIERS
Disclosed is a pulsed laser apparatus and method of generating a laser pulse. The apparatus includes an input coupler configured to receive pumping light from a pumping light source and a seed pulse from a seed pulse generator. The apparatus further includes a doped fiber-optic cable with an input port at a first end configured to receive the pumping light and the seed pulse. The doped fiber-optic cable amplifies the seed pulse to generate an output pulse. Along a first length of the doped fiber optic cable, the pulse spectrum broadens rapidly owing to nonlinearity. Beyond the first length in an extended portion, the output pulse shifts towards longer wavelengths and broadens in both spectral and temporal domains The apparatus also includes an output port at a second end of the doped fiber-optic cable, wherein the output pulse exits the doped fiber-optic cable at the output port.
Fiber laser system based on solitonic passive mode-locking
A fiber laser system based in solitonic passive mode-locking, including a laser diode to emit and deliver an optical signal of a first wavelength; a single-fiber laser cavity including a dichroic mirror, a SESAM and a polarization maintaining highly-doped active fiber, to receive the emitted signal and to emit a pulsed optical signal of a second wavelength, generating laser light in the form of mode-locked ultrashort pulses; a unit coupling the laser diode to the single-fiber laser cavity; and an isolator device protecting the cavity from back reflections. The solitonic mode-locked ultrashort pulses are comprised in a range of 100 fs<10 ps with repetition rates of hundreds MHz to tens of GHz.
SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR GENERATING HIGH-POWER ULTRA-SHORT PULSES IN LASERS
A system and method for generating ultra-short pulses intended to be inserted into a ring laser with a regulator of a pulsed signal of a certain intensity, the system includes an optical attenuator that allows the intensity of the pulsed signal to be adjusted at the input of an optical guide section, and a distributed amplification device inserted in the optical guide that make it possible to manage the power of the signal therein, so that it propagates as solitons or as self-similar pulses without suffering unwanted distortions despite the increase in the length of the laser cavity, increasing the power of the pulsed signal and making it possible to exceed the usual power limits of this type of laser.