PLANAR OPTICAL TELESCOPE AND RELATED METHODS
20220334373 · 2022-10-20
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02B6/4298
PHYSICS
G02B3/0056
PHYSICS
G02B17/023
PHYSICS
H04N23/54
ELECTRICITY
G02B23/00
PHYSICS
G02B6/4201
PHYSICS
G02B6/2804
PHYSICS
G02B6/2808
PHYSICS
H04N23/55
ELECTRICITY
G02B27/0081
PHYSICS
International classification
G02B23/00
PHYSICS
G02B17/02
PHYSICS
G02B27/00
PHYSICS
G02B6/28
PHYSICS
Abstract
An optical telescope may include an array of optical lenslets in a common plane, and optical waveguides extending from respective optical lenslets and each having a common optical path delay. Further, at least one optical star coupler may be downstream from the optical waveguides, and an optical detector may be downstream from the at least one optical star coupler and having an optical image formed thereon.
Claims
1. An optical telescope comprising: an array of optical lenslets in a common plane; a plurality of optical waveguides extending from respective optical lenslets, the plurality of optical waveguides each having a common optical path delay; at least one optical star coupler downstream from the plurality of optical waveguides; and an optical detector downstream from the at least one optical star coupler and having an optical image formed thereon.
2. The optical telescope of claim 1 further comprising a plurality of delay elements associated with respective optical waveguides.
3. The optical telescope of claim 2 wherein the plurality of delay elements comprises a plurality of heaters.
4. The optical telescope of claim 1 comprising: a first photonic layer having the array of optical lenslets therein; and a second photonic layer having the plurality of optical waveguides therein.
5. The optical telescope of claim 4 wherein the second photonic layer comprises an integrated circuit including a plurality of delay elements associated with respective optical waveguides.
6. The optical telescope of claim 4 comprising a third photonic layer having the at least one optical star coupler therein.
7. The optical telescope of claim 4 comprising a fourth photonic layer having the optical detector therein.
8. The optical telescope of claim 1 comprising: a first photonic layer having the array of lenslets therein arranged in rows and columns; a second photonic layer having a set of optical star couplers for the rows; and a third photonic layer having a set of optical star couplers for the columns.
9. The optical telescope of claim 8 wherein the second and third photonic layers are vertically arranged.
10. The optical telescope of claim 8 wherein the second and third photonic layers are horizontally arranged.
11. The optical telescope of claim 8 comprising a fourth photonic layer having the optical detector therein.
12. An optical telescope assembly comprising: a first optical telescope comprising an array of optical lenslets in a common plane, a plurality of optical waveguides extending from respective optical lenslets, the plurality of optical waveguides each having a common optical path delay, at least one optical star coupler downstream from the plurality of optical waveguides, and an optical detector downstream from the at least one optical star coupler and having an optical image formed thereon; and a second optical telescope adjacent the first optical telescope and having a broader field of view than the first optical telescope.
13. The optical telescope assembly of claim 12 wherein the first optical telescope comprises a plurality of delay elements associated with respective optical waveguides.
14. The optical telescope assembly of claim 13 wherein the plurality of delay elements comprises a plurality of heaters.
15. The optical telescope assembly of claim 12 wherein the first optical telescope comprises: a first photonic layer having the array of optical lenslets therein; and a second photonic layer having the plurality of optical waveguides therein.
16. The optical telescope assembly of claim 15 wherein the first telescope comprises a third photonic layer having the at least one optical star coupler therein.
17. The optical telescope assembly of claim 15 wherein the first optical telescope comprises a fourth photonic layer having the optical detector therein.
18. The optical telescope assembly of claim 12 wherein the first optical telescope comprises: a first photonic layer having the array of lenslets therein arranged in rows and columns; a second photonic layer having a set of optical star couplers for the rows; and a third photonic layer having a set of optical star couplers for the columns.
19. The optical telescope assembly of claim 17 wherein the first optical telescope comprises a fourth photonic layer having the optical detector therein.
20. A method for making an optical telescope comprising: forming an array of optical lenslets in a common plane; forming a plurality of optical waveguides extending from respective optical lenslets, the plurality of optical waveguides each having a common optical path delay; forming at least one optical star coupler downstream from the plurality of optical waveguides; and forming an optical detector downstream from the at least one optical star coupler and having an optical image formed thereon.
21. The method of claim 20 comprising forming a plurality of delay elements associated with respective optical waveguides.
22. The method of claim 21 wherein the plurality of delay elements comprises a plurality of heaters.
23. The method of claim 20 comprising: forming a first photonic layer having the array of optical lenslets therein; and forming a second photonic layer having the plurality of optical waveguides therein.
24. The method of claim 23 comprising forming a third photonic layer having the at least one optical star coupler therein.
25. The method of claim 23 comprising forming a fourth photonic layer having the optical detector therein.
26. The method of claim 20 further comprising: forming a first photonic layer having the array of lenslets therein arranged in rows and columns; forming a second photonic layer having a set of optical star couplers for the rows; and forming a third photonic layer having a set of optical star couplers for the columns.
27. The method of claim 26 wherein the second and third photonic layers are vertically arranged.
28. The method of claim 26 wherein the second and third photonic layers are horizontally arranged.
29. The method of claim 26 comprising forming a fourth photonic layer having the optical detector therein.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0018] The present description is made with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which exemplary embodiments are shown. However, many different embodiments may be used, and thus the description should not be construed as limited to the particular embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout.
[0019] Referring initially to
[0020] By way of example, the lenslets 31 may be fused silica, and may be formed as a laser-written array, such as with a femtosecond laser, for example. The waveguides 32 may be silicon nitride surrounded by fused silica, and may also be laser-written with a femtosecond laser, for example. Further details regarding femtosecond laser-written waveguides and optical components may be found in U.S. Pat. No. 10,365,536 to Jenkins et al., which is also assigned to the present Applicant and is hereby incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
[0021] In the illustrated example, the star coupler 33 is used as a lens. Generally speaking, a star coupler is an array of waveguides that open onto a slab waveguide with waveguides all being the same radius away from the center of the output waveguides, such that light focuses on the center output waveguide when phase is equal across the input array, and light coming into the array at an angle has a laterally displaced focus, as shown. As noted above, the path lengths of the waveguides 32 may be set to provide a common optical path delay (i.e., a static delay) so that light received by the lenslets 31 reaches the star coupler 33 in phase. This, in turn, allows an image to form on the back surface of the star coupler for detection by an optical detector 34.
[0022] Another example embodiment of an optical telescope 40 including multiple star couplers is shown in
[0023] In the illustrated example, an optional arrayed waveguide grating (AWG) spectrograph 45 is connected to one or more outputs of the second star coupler 43b for hyperspectral imaging. The AWG spectrograph 45 is followed by output waveguides 46 and an optical detector 44. The output waveguides 46 may advantageously couple straight to a conventional two-axis detector. As will be discussed further below, the waveguide (delay lines) 42a and/or 42b may be implemented with heaters for fine tuning and adaptive optics in some embodiments.
[0024] Turning to
[0025] Still another example embodiment of an optical telescope 60 utilizing PICs with out-of-plane couplers is now described with reference to
[0026] Another example embodiment of an optical telescope 70 which incorporates laser-written 3D waveguide/delay lines 72 is now described with reference to
[0027] The waveguides 72 may be written with a femtosecond laser, for example, as discussed further above. In the present example, the waveguides 72 and star coupler 73 are formed in a layer 78 of optical material (e.g., fused silica). Moreover, the star coupler 73 is a two-axis star coupler, which works on the same geometry in 3D space as a one-axis star coupler works on a plane. Despite having a single star coupler 73, the illustrated configuration allows for a relatively large number of output pixels, as well as relatively short optical paths. The waveguides 72 may be stacked from a given lenslet 71 focal length into their own delay PIC layer 79a, and the waveguides 72 may be configured to “spiral” in/out to avoid tight bends. In some configurations, the star coupler may be positioned on its side help to minimize layer 78 thickness, if desired.
[0028] Turning to
[0029] A related method for making optical telescopes such as those discussed above is now described with reference to the flow diagram 90 of
[0030] The above-described configurations advantageously allow the telescope to collapse in thickness down to a relatively flat panel, in exchange for a somewhat narrower field of view compared to a conventional telescope. However, this package replaces the focal length of a conventional telescope with a star coupler built into a substrate, which opens up the possibility for flat panel configurations with steerable high magnification imaging in a small form factor (SWaP), such as on a drone or even a handheld platform.
[0031] Many modifications and other embodiments will come to the mind of one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. Therefore, it is understood that the disclosure is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed, and that modifications and embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.