RESUMO
We observe clear evidence of adiabatic passage between photon populations via a four-wave mixing process, implemented through a dispersion sweep arranged by a core diameter taper of an optical fiber. Photonic rapid adiabatic passage through the cubic electric susceptibility thus opens precise control of frequency translation between broadband light fields to all common optical media. Areas of potential impact include optical fiber and on-chip waveguide platforms for quantum information, ultrafast spectroscopy and metrology, and extreme light-matter interaction science.
RESUMO
We demonstrate coherent spectral beam combining and femtosecond pulse spectral synthesis using three parallel fiber chirped pulse amplifiers, each amplifying different ultrashort-pulse spectra. This proof-of-concept experiment opens a path to simultaneously overcome individual-amplifier energy and power limitations, as well as limitations on amplified pulse spectra due to the gain narrowing in a single fiber amplifier.
Assuntos
Amplificadores Eletrônicos , Tecnologia de Fibra Óptica/instrumentação , Lasers , Processamento de Sinais Assistido por Computador/instrumentação , Desenho de Equipamento , Análise de Falha de EquipamentoRESUMO
We report on femtosecond pulse combining with up to four parallel chirped-pulse fiber amplifier channels. Active phase locking is implemented using the LOCSET (Locking of Optical Coherence by Single-detector Electronic-frequency Tagging) single detector feedback technique, resulting in 96.4%, 94.0%, and 93.9% relative combining efficiency with two, three, and four channels respectively. Theoretical and experimental analysis of combining efficiency dependence on amplitude and phase noise shows convergence to a fixed value with increasing number of channels, indicating that multi-channel pulse combining with LOCSET feedback should be scalable to very large numbers of channels.
RESUMO
We generalize the recently proposed model for coherent beam combining in passive fiber laser arrays [Opt. Express 17, 19509 (2009)] to include the transient gain dynamics and the complication of counterpropagating waves, two important features characterizing actual experimental conditions. The extended model reveals that beam combining is not affected by the population relaxation process or the presence of backward propagating waves, which only serve to co-saturate the gain. The presence of nonresonant nonlinearity is found to reduce the coherent combining efficiency at high power levels. We show that the array lases at the frequencies with minimum overall losses when multiple loss mechanisms are present.
Assuntos
Desenho Assistido por Computador , Tecnologia de Fibra Óptica/instrumentação , Lasers , Desenho de Equipamento , Análise de Falha de Equipamento , Luz , Modelos Estatísticos , Modelos Teóricos , Espalhamento de RadiaçãoRESUMO
We explore, by means of experiments and simulation, the power combining efficiency and power fluctuation of coherently phased 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16-channel fiber-laser arrays using fused 50:50 single-mode couplers. The measured evolution of power combining efficiency with array size agrees with simulations based on a new propagation model. For our particular system the power fluctuations due to small wavelength-scale length variations are seen to scale with array size as N(3). Beat spectra support the notion that a lack of coherently-combined supermodes in arrays of increasing size leads to a decrease in combined-power efficiency.
RESUMO
We present a new model for studying the beam combining mechanism, spectral and temporal dynamics, the role of nonlinearity, and the power scaling issue of discretely coupled fiber laser arrays. The model accounts for the multiple longitudinal modes of individual fiber lasers and shows directly the formation of the composite-cavity modes. Detailed output power spectra and their evolution with increasing array size and pump power are also explored for the first time. In addition, it is, to our knowledge, the only model that closely resembles the real experimental conditions in which no deliberate control of the fiber lengths (mismatch) is required while highly efficient coherent beam combining is still attained.