Diffractive mirrors and diffractive telescopes with corrected temporal dispersion
10330947 ยท 2019-06-25
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02B5/1814
PHYSICS
International classification
G02B27/42
PHYSICS
Abstract
Mirrors, lenses, devices, apparatus, systems and methods for correcting temporal dispersion of laser pulses or other pulses of electromagnetic radiation in diffractive telescopes used in applications, such as but not limited to optical telescopes, transmitters, receivers, and transceivers for laser communication and imaging. Diffractive lenses and mirrors allow for producing large area telescopes and reducing or eliminating temporal dispersion of laser pulses and other pulses of electromagnetic radiation recorded by such telescopes. This can be achieved by utilizing high efficiency thin film diffractive optical films, particularly, diffractive waveplates, and having a secondary diffractive mirror of a shape selected to assure that the propagation time from the flat primary collecting lens or mirror is independent of the position on the flat primary collecting lens or mirror at which the radiation impinges.
Claims
1. A telescope system comprising: a flat thin film primary diffractive waveplate lens providing near 100% high efficiency; and a temporal dispersion corrector mirror, having a curvature and diffraction grating structure that is a coating of a continuous surface such that all rays of light or other electromagnetic radiation at a specified operating wavelength, and normally incident on the flat primary diffractive lens, traverse the same path length from the flat primary diffractive lens to the focal point of the telescope, wherein the mirror is configured to eliminate a temporal dispersion that would be present for pulses reaching the focal point of the telescope.
2. The telescope system as in claim 1, wherein the temporal dispersion corrector mirror is a diffractive waveplate mirror.
3. A telescope system comprising: a flat thin film primary diffractive lens; and a temporal dispersion corrector mirror, having a curvature and diffraction grating structure that is a coating of a continuous surface such that all rays of light or other electromagnetic radiation at a specified operating wavelength, and normally incident on the flat primary diffractive lens, traverse the same path length from the flat primary diffractive lens to the focal point of the telescope, wherein the temporal dispersion corrector mirror is a diffractive waveplate mirror comprising: a substrate containing a non-depolarizing reflective coating, the substrate having a surface shape defined such as it eliminates a temporal dispersion that would be present for pulses reaching a focal point of the telescope; a non-patterned quarter-wave phase retarder film; and a patterned half-wave diffractive waveplate coating.
4. The telescope system as in claim 3, wherein the diffractive waveplate mirror comprises a patterned quarter-wave plate.
5. A telescope system comprising: a flat primary diffractive waveplate mirror providing near 100% high efficiency; and a temporal dispersion corrector mirror, having a curvature and diffraction grating structure that is a coating of a continuous surface such that all rays of light or rays of other electromagnetic radiation at a specified operating wavelength, and normally incident on the primary diffractive element, traverse the same path length from the flat primary diffractive lens to a focal point of the telescope, wherein the mirror is configured to eliminate a temporal dispersion that would be present for pulses reaching the focal point of the telescope.
6. The telescope system as in claim 5, wherein the temporal dispersion corrector mirror is a diffractive waveplate mirror.
7. The telescope system as in claim 6, wherein the diffractive waveplate mirror comprises: a substrate containing a non-depolarizing reflective coating; a patterned half-wave retardation layer; and a non-patterned quarter-wave retardation layer.
8. The telescope system as in claim 6, wherein the diffractive waveplate mirror comprises a single-layer patterned quarter-wave retardation layer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(6) Before explaining the disclosed embodiments of the present invention in detail it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its applications to the details of the particular arrangements shown since the invention is capable of other embodiments. Also, the terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and not of limitation.
(7) In the Summary above and in the Detailed Description of Preferred Embodiments and in the accompanying drawings, reference is made to particular features (including method steps) of the invention. It is to be understood that the disclosure of the invention in this specification does not include all possible combinations of such particular features. For example, where a particular feature is disclosed in the context of a particular aspect or embodiment of the invention, that feature can also be used, to the extent possible, in combination with and/or in the context of other particular aspects and embodiments of the invention, and in the invention generally.
(8) In this section, some embodiments of the invention will be described more fully with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout, and prime notation is used to indicate similar elements in alternative embodiments.
(9) The present invention relates to an apparatus for reducing or eliminating the temporal dispersion that causes pulse stretching in telescopes used for collecting laser pulses and focusing the energy of such pulses into a laser receiver.
(10) As shown in
(11) Because the optical path length from the edge of lens in
(12) For the geometry illustrated in
(13) For long laser pulses, a temporal dispersion or pulse stretching of approximately 2.5 ns would be insignificant, but for pulsewidths common in modern optical communication systems, such temporal dispersion would significantly degrade the performance of the communication system. For example, if the laser pulses used in a laser communication system have a pulsewidth of approximately 0.5 ns at the input to this telescope, stretching of the pulse by an additional approximately 2.5 ns would be a severe detriment to the usefulness of a telescope intended to collect such pulses. This is illustrated in
(14) If such a laser optical pulse, with a lateral spatial extent exceeding the diameter of the diffractive primary lens 102 shown in
(15) A preferred embodiment of the invention disclosed here is illustrated in
(16) The detailed structure of the temporal dispersion corrector of the present invention in a preferred embodiment is shown in
(17) The function z(r) of
(18)
In Equation (1), F is the focal length of the diffractive lens 302 in
{r.sup.2+[LMz(r)].sup.2}.sup.1/2+{(Rr).sup.2+[Lz(r)].sup.2}.sup.1/2=2LM(2)
Together, Equations (1) and (2) implicitly define the function z(r) that is required to make the path lengths equal for all rays in
(19) The following equations provide further clarification of the specific spatial form of the temporal dispersion corrector mirror 310 in
(20)
where
a=2[(FL)sin .sup.2(2LM)cos L+(LM)(cos ).sup.2](4)
b=(LM).sup.2(cos ).sup.2+(FL).sup.2(sin ).sup.2[(2LM)cos L].sup.2(5)
=tan.sup.1(R/F)(6)
(21) Equations (3)-(6) allow a value of z(r) to be computed for each input ray height R. For each such z(r) the corresponding value of r can be calculated from Equation (1).
(22) As an illustration of the use of Equations (1)-(6) to implicitly define the form of the function z(r), and therefore the structure of the temporal dispersion corrector mirror 310 illustrated in
(23) The values of r and z(r) that satisfy formulas (1) and (2) for the edge ray (for which R=approximately 6 m) and for the values M=approximately 16 m and L=approximately 20 m (where M and L are the dimensions shown in
(24) The total path length of the axial ray from the input lens 302 to the focal point 311 in
(25) The path length of the edge ray from the lens 302 to the temporal dispersion corrector mirror 310 is equal to {square root over ([Lz(r)].sup.2+(Rr).sup.2)}={square root over ((200.383).sup.2+(61.096).sup.2)}=approximately 20.221 m, and the path length of the edge ray from the temporal dispersion corrector mirror 310 to the focal point 311 is equal to {square root over ([LMz(r)].sup.2+r.sup.2)}={square root over ((20160.383).sup.2+1.096.sup.2)}=approximately 3.779 m. Therefore the total optical path length for the edge ray from the lens 302 to the focal point 311 in
(26) The example given above demonstrates that for the particular case for which a ray trace is shown in
(27) One other key characteristic of the temporal dispersion corrector mirror 310 in
(28) The diffractive waveplate grating period on the temporal dispersion corrector mirror that accomplishes this is given by the following formula:
(29)
where the parameters and are defined as:
(30)
and is the operating wavelength in vacuum. For the example discussed previously, and for an operating wavelength of =approximately 1550 nm, the grating period as a function of the coordinate r is shown in
(31) Although a specific preferred embodiment is used for illustrative purposes in this disclosure, as illustrated in
(32) Application to diffractive telescopes in which the primary collecting element is a diffractive mirror instead of a diffractive lens
(33) Applications in which the magnitude, as well as the sign, of the ray angles are changed by the temporal dispersion corrector mirror
(34) Applications in which the diffractive reflective coating on the temporal dispersion corrector mirror 310 in
(35) Applications in which the diffractive coating on the temporal dispersion corrector mirror is a patterned quarter-wave plate, instead of a combination of a patterned half-wave layer over a non-patterned quarter-wave layer as illustrated in
(36) The term approximately is similar to the term about and can be +/10% of the amount referenced. Additionally, preferred amounts and ranges can include the amounts and ranges referenced without the prefix of being approximately.
(37) While the invention has been described, disclosed, illustrated and shown in various terms of certain embodiments or modifications which it has presumed in practice, the scope of the invention is not intended to be, nor should it be deemed to be, limited thereby and such other modifications or embodiments as may be suggested by the teachings herein are particularly reserved especially as they fall within the breadth and scope of the claims here appended.